Thinned semiconductor chip with edge support
11251152 · 2022-02-15
Assignee
Inventors
- Duane Wilcoxen (Dallas, TX, US)
- Chiao-Shun Chuang (Zhubei, TW)
- Rain Liu (Chengdu, CN)
- Thomas Tsai (Hsinchu, TW)
- Will Zhang (Chengdu, CN)
Cpc classification
H01L2924/00014
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/00014
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/13091
ELECTRICITY
H01L2224/0345
ELECTRICITY
H01L2224/0345
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
A semiconductor device with reduced device resistance is disclosed. The semiconductor device comprises a semiconductor chip in which the chip thickness at the center portion of the chip where the circuit elements are disposed is uniform and is different from the chip thickness near the chip sides distant from the circuit elements.
Claims
1. A semiconductor device, comprising: a semiconductor chip having a top chip surface, a bottom chip surface, and chip sides; a first semiconductor layer having a first resistivity and a substrate under the first semiconductor layer, the substrate having a second resistivity lower than the first resistivity; circuit elements disposed in the first semiconductor layer in a center portion of the chip near the top chip surface; a structure in the substrate layer, the structure having an uniform first thickness at the center portion of the chip near the circuit elements and a varied second thickness different form the first thickness near the chip sides distant from the circuit elements; and a layer of molding compound having a flat back surface covering the uniform first thickness at the center portion of the chip near the circuit elements.
2. The semiconductor device of claim 1, further comprising: a linear wall structure disposed along the chip sides, enclosing the center portion of the chip; the wall structure having an outer surface extending from the top chip surface towards the bottom device surface, and a spread-out portion towards the center portion of the chip; and the spread-out portion having a varied thickness.
3. The semiconductor device of claim 2, further comprising a metal layer disposed between the molding compound layer and the bottom chip surface.
4. The semiconductor device of claim 2, in which the bottom chip surface being concave near the wall structure.
5. The semiconductor device of claim 3, in which the outer surface of the wall structure is not covered by a metal layer.
6. The semiconductor device of claim 2, in which the first semiconductor layer is a semiconductor epitaxial layer with the first resistivity.
7. The semiconductor device of claim 6, in which the semiconductor substrate layer is under the epitaxial layer and has the second resistivity lower than the first resistivity.
8. The semiconductor device of claim 1, in which the circuit elements comprises a rectifier.
9. The semiconductor device of claim 8, in which the rectifier comprises two terminals accessible from the top chip surface.
10. The semiconductor device of claim 1, in which the circuit elements comprises a MOSFET.
11. The semiconductor device of claim 10, in which the MOSFET comprises two terminals accessible from the top chip surface.
12. The semiconductor device of claim 1, in which the circuit elements comprises two MOSFETs.
13. The semiconductor device of claim 12, in which the two MOSFETs comprise four terminals accessible from the top chip surface and two terminals connected by a backside metal layer at the back, chip surface.
14. The semiconductor device of claim 7, in which the wall structure comprises a section of epitaxial layer and a section of substrate layer.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWING FIGURES
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
DEFINITIONS
(9) The terms used in this disclosure generally have their ordinary meanings in the art within the context of the invention. Certain terms are discussed below to provide additional guidance to the practitioners regarding the description of the invention. It will be appreciated that the same thing may be said in more than one way. Consequently, alternative language and synonyms may be used.
(10) A semiconductor device in this paper refers to a device that contains semiconductor materials. The material may be a single element in group IV on the periodic table such as silicon, geranium, and carbon, and compounds such as gallium nitride and silicon carbide. The semiconductor material in semiconductor devices usually comes in the form of chips. The device may contain more than one chip in multi-chip packages. The chip or chips are usually encapsulated with protective material such as metal, ceramic, or epoxy.
(11) A chip in this paper refers to a small piece of semiconductor material in which circuit elements are embedded. A chip is usually square and has two main opposite surfaces of major crystallographic planes. In this paper, the term chip is interchangeable used as the term die.
(12) In this paper, terms such as top, bottom, and side as in top device surface, top chip surface, and chip sides are used in reference to the attached drawing figures and should not be construed as indication of orientation limitations when describing a physical device.
(13) In this paper, the term center portion such as “in a center portion of the chip” means a general area in a chip distant from the edge of the chip. In conventional chip design layouts, circuit elements and the wirings between elements are arranged in the center portion because the mechanical sawing at the end of assembly process results in rupture of the semiconductor crystal structure and creates “crystallographic defects.” The effects of such defects reach inwardly from the edges. In order to ensure the device operates as designed, circuit elements are kept away from the peripheral region of chips.
(14) In this paper, the term “varied” refers to the value of measurements that change as a function of the location or time of the measurement, as opposed to being constant. The change may be gradual or it may be stepwise.
(15) In the paper, terms such as orthogonal, linear, flat, and uniform are to be construed as descriptions of a manufactured article. To the extent that there are manufacturing and measurement tolerances the terms are not necessarily mathematical.
(16) In this paper, circuit elements refer to electrical components such as p-n junctions, transistors, diodes, rectifiers, resistors, capacitors, and inductors, and conduction wirings, that can be coupled together to form electric circuits.
(17) In this paper, the term device resistance refers to the measured electrical resistance of a circuit element when it is properly bias. For example, when a p-n junction diode is forward biased, the device resistance is the ratio of the voltage across the diode terminals to the current through the junction.
(18) In this paper, the term front-end refers to the portion of manufacturing of semiconductor devices that starts at fresh wafers through the fabrication of circuit elements embedded in the wafers and traditionally ends with the application of a passivation layer on the wafers. The term back-end refers to the portion of manufacturing of semiconductor devices that starts at the completion of the front-end processes and traditionally includes steps such as back-grind, die-bond, wire-bond, molding, sawing, testing, and laser marking. The process disclosed in this paper include both front-end and back-end process steps.
(19) In this paper the term wall structure refers to a structure that is disposed on the edge of a chip and is integral part of the chip for the purpose of enhancing the mechanical strength to the chip. The wall structure has an outer surface that meets the top surface of the chip and defined the outer edge of the chip. When the wall structure is formed by plasma etch, the intersection of the vertical portion of the wall and the bottom surface of the chip is curved as depicted in the drawing figures.
(20) In this paper, the term enclosing refers to the placement of the wall structure around the edge of the chip so it surrounds the center portion of the chip. In some embodiment, the wall structure does not completely seal off the center portion of the chip and allows gaps in the wall sections.
(21) In this paper the term near the top chip surface refers to the location of the circuit elements embedded in the semiconductor chip. Traditionally, circuit elements are installed in the chip at the front-end by introducing foreign material including selected impurity elements from the top chip surface into the interior of the chip and adding thin film on the top surface. As a result, the circuit elements are generally disposed near the top chip surface.
(22) In this paper, the term height refers in general to the length of a structural element as measured from a reference point. For example, in the embodiments of this invention that include wall structure in a chip, the height of its outer surface is in reference to the top chip surface and the height of its inner surface is in reference to the bottom chip surface.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
(23)
(24) The silicon chip in this embodiment contains a pair of trench MOSFET devices 103a and 103b. The drain nodes of the two MOSFETs are connected electrically at the back-side metal layer 40. The source nodes of the two MOSFETs 103a and 103b are accessible through the two sets of metal pads S1s and S2s. The gate nodes are accessible through the metal pads g1 and g2. Other device elements may also be built in the silicon chip to make up different integrated circuits.
(25) In the embodiment depicted in
(26)
(27)
(28)
(29)
(30) As depicted in
(31)
(32)
(33)