ELECTROPLATING CONTACT RING WITH RADIALLY OFFSET CONTACT FINGERS
20170275776 ยท 2017-09-28
Inventors
Cpc classification
C25D17/001
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C25D7/123
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
H01R39/18
ELECTRICITY
H01L21/2885
ELECTRICITY
International classification
C25D17/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
A contact ring for an electroprocessor has redundant contact fingers, i.e., more contact fingers than needed for contacting a very narrow edge exclusion zone on a substrate such as a semiconductor wafer. The contact fingers have slightly different lengths so that they extend to different radial positions. By providing redundant contact fingers, and by slightly varying the lengths of the contact fingers, a sufficient number of contact fingers make contact with the electrically conductive surface in the edge exclusion zone to provide good electroplating results.
Claims
1. A contact ring for use in an electroplating processor, comprising: an annular base ring; a plurality of first and second contact fingers extending radially inwardly from the annular base ring, with substantially each first contact finger having a first length and with substantially each second contact finger having a second length, and with the first length 0.05 to 0.5 mm longer than the second length.
2. The contact ring of claim 1 wherein each first contact finger is between two second contact fingers.
3. The contact ring of claim 1 wherein the first length is 0.1 to 0.2 mm longer than the second length.
4. The contact ring of claim 3 further comprising a plurality of third contact fingers extending radially inwardly from the annular base ring, with substantially each third contact finger having a third length, and the third length less than the second length.
5. The contact ring of claim 4 with the contact fingers arranged in clusters, with each cluster including a first, a second and a third contact finger, with the second contact finger in between the first and the third contact finger.
6. The contact ring of claim 1 further comprising a seal on the contact ring, with the seal having an annular sealing surface adapted to seal against a wafer, and with all contact fingers radially outside of the annular sealing surface.
7. The contact ring of claim 1 with the contact fingers electrically connected to a connector adapted to connect to an electroprocessing processor.
8. The contact ring of claim 7 wherein the first and second contact fingers are formed by stamping unstressed metal sheet stock, and wherein the stamping is a straight strip with the first and second fingers parallel to each other, and with each of the first and second contact fingers comprising a flat metal element 0.1 to 0.2 mm thick.
9. Electroprocessing apparatus comprising: a head; a rotor in the head; an annular contact ring attachable onto the rotor; a frame including a vessel, with the head movable to position the annular contact ring in the vessel and out of the vessel; a plurality of first contact fingers on the contact ring, with the first contact fingers having a first length; a plurality of second contact fingers on the contact ring, with the second contact fingers having a second length less than the first length; with each of the first and second contact fingers aligned on a radius of the contact ring.
10. The apparatus of claim 9 wherein substantially every contact finger is flat and rectangular.
11. The apparatus of claim 10 wherein the contact fingers are equally spaced apart.
12. The apparatus of claim 11 wherein the first length is 0.05 to 0.2 mm greater than the second length.
13. The contact ring of claim 12 with the contact ring having a total of 300 to 1000 contact fingers.
14. The contact ring of claim 13 further comprising an annular seal overlying the contact fingers.
15. A method of electroprocessing a wafer having an electrically conductive edge exclusion zone, comprising: placing the wafer into an electroprocessor having a contact ring having at least a plurality of first contact fingers having a first length and a plurality of second contact fingers having a second length less than the first length; moving a front side of the wafer into engagement with the first and second contact fingers, with the first contact fingers contacting the front side of the wafer on a first diameter in the edge exclusion zone, and with the second contact fingers contacting the front side of the wafer on a second diameter in the edge exclusion zone, with the second diameter larger than the first diameter; placing the front side of the wafer into contact with an electrolyte; and conducting electric current through the electrolyte, the edge exclusion zone and the first and second contact fingers.
16. The method of claim 15 with the contact ring having third contact fingers having a third length less than the second length, further comprising aligning the wafer with the contact ring so that the second diameter is a centered in the edge exclusion zone.
17. The method of claim 15 with the wafer comprising a reconstituted wafer having a seed layer on a molding compound layer, and a photoresist layer on the seed layer, and with the difference between the first length and the second length greater than the width of the edge exclusion zone.
18. The method of claim 17 further comprising sealing the electrolyte away from the contact fingers via a seal contacting the photoresist layer.
19. The method of claim 17 with the reconstituted wafer having an annular seed layer extension radially outside of the molding compound layer, and with at least some of the second contact fingers contacting the annular seed layer extension.
20. The method of claim 16 with the wafer comprising a reconstituted wafer having a seed layer on a molding compound layer, and a photoresist layer on the seed layer, and with the first contact fingers nominally dimensioned to contact the photoresist layer, the second contact fingers nominally dimensioned to contact the edge exclusion zone, and the third contact finger nominally dimension to contact an annular seed layer extension radially to the outside of the edge exclusion zone.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0006]
[0007]
[0008]
[0009]
[0010]
[0011]
[0012]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0013] As shown in
[0014] Referring still to
[0015]
[0016]
[0017] A shield 54, if used, covers part of or the entire length of contact fingers 82. The contact fingers 82 are electrically connected to the processor electrical system via wiring and/or a conductive base ring 50, and via a connector on the contact ring 30 or on the head.
[0018] Turning to
[0019] As shown in
[0020]
[0021] In the example shown in
[0022] For example, if the expected annular edge exclusion zone of exposed seed layer is between radius=148.5 mm and 148.6 mm (on a 300 mm wafer) (i.e. 1.4 mm and 1.5 mm from the wafer edge), then the reach on adjacent fingers on the contact ring 30 may be 1.425 mm and 1.475 mm, to widen the window of contact landing positions. Every third finger may optionally have a different length, creating an even larger window (e.g., 1.4 mm; 1.45 mm; or 1.5 mm). This design doubles the workable tolerance for the contact fingers, insuring good contact on all wafers in a high volume manufacturing environment.
[0023] The contact ring 30 may also be provided with various fingers of varying lengths, so that a single contact ring can be used with various types of wafers having various dimensions of the exposed seed layer. In processing systems where the contact ring is in a wafer chuck moved into and out of the processor 20 with the wafer 100, providing the contact ring 30 as shown in
[0024]
[0025]
[0026] The width of the edge exclusion zone 112 (on top of the step 114) is influenced by the positioning and concentricity of the photoresist layer 108 and the molding compound layer 104, and may vary by the type of reconstituted wafer 100 involved. Generally, the edge exclusion zone is 0.1 to 0.2 mm wide. The seed layer extension 118 on the substrate 106 radially outside of the layer of molding compound 104, shown in dotted lines in
[0027] In view of the discussion above, methods for electroprocessing a wafer having an electrically conductive edge exclusion zone, include placing the wafer into an electroprocessor having a contact ring having first contact fingers having a first length and second contact fingers having a second length less than the first length. A front side of the wafer is moved into engagement with the first and second contact fingers, with the first contact fingers contacting the front side of the wafer on a first diameter in the edge exclusion zone, and with the second contact fingers contacting the front side of the wafer on a second diameter in the edge exclusion zone, with the second diameter larger than the first diameter. The front side of the wafer is placed into contact with an electrolyte. Electric current is conducted through the electrolyte, the edge exclusion zone and the first and second contact fingers. Metal ions in the electrolyte deposit out onto the conductive edge exclusion zone and other areas electrically connected to it, forming a metal layer on the wafer.
[0028] Methods may also include aligning the wafer with the contact ring so that the second diameter is a centered in the edge exclusion zone. Relative to electroprocessing a reconstituted wafer having a seed layer on a molding compound layer, and a photoresist layer on the seed layer, the difference between the first length and the second length may be greater than the width of the edge exclusion zone. Some of the second contact fingers may contact the annular seed layer extension rather than the edge exclusion zone, depending on the accumulation of mechanical tolerances. In designs using first, second and third contact fingers, the second contact fingers can be nominally dimensioned to contact the edge exclusion zone, and the third contact fingers nominally dimension to contact the annular seed layer extension radially to the outside of the edge exclusion zone.
[0029] Thus, novel apparatus and methods have been described. Various changes and modifications may of course be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. The invention, therefore, should not be limited, except to the following claims and their equivalents.