TWO-STEP DECAPSULATION TECHNIQUE FOR SEMICONDUCTOR PACKAGE HAVING SILVER BOND WIRES
20230138508 ยท 2023-05-04
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01L25/18
ELECTRICITY
H01L23/552
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01L23/552
ELECTRICITY
H01L21/67
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
In one embodiment, a method includes: laser ablating an encapsulant of a semiconductor package, until a threshold amount of the encapsulant remains above one or more die of the semiconductor package; and providing at least one drop of acid onto a surface of the ablated semiconductor package to acid etch for a first time duration, to remove a remaining portion of the encapsulant above the one or more die, where after the acid etch, a die of interest is exposed and the silver bond wires of the semiconductor package are preserved.
Claims
1. A method comprising: laser ablating an encapsulant of a semiconductor package, until a threshold amount of the encapsulant remains above one or more die of the semiconductor package; and providing at least one drop of acid onto a surface of the ablated semiconductor package to acid etch for a first time duration, to remove a remaining portion of the encapsulant above the one or more die, wherein after the acid etch, the one or more die are sufficiently exposed and the silver bond wires of the semiconductor package are exposed and preserved.
2. The method of claim 1, further comprising iteratively providing a single drop of the acid onto the surface of the ablated semiconductor package until the one or more die are sufficiently exposed and the silver bond wires are exposed.
3. The method of claim 1, further comprising iteratively providing a single drop of the acid comprising fuming nitric acid onto the surface of the ablated semiconductor package and thereafter rinsing the ablated semiconductor package, until the one or more die are sufficiently exposed and the silver bond wires are exposed.
4. The method of claim 1, further comprising: adapting the ablated semiconductor package on a hot plate having a temperature of less than approximately 65 degrees Celsius, and providing the at least one drop of acid onto the surface of the ablated packaged device while on the hot plate having the temperature of less than approximately 65 degrees Celsius.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the first time duration is less than 20 seconds.
6. The method of claim 1, further comprising rinsing the ablated semiconductor package of the acid.
7. The method of claim 6, further comprising sonicating the ablated semiconductor package after the rinsing.
8. The method of claim 7, further comprising drying the ablated semiconductor package after the sonicating.
9. The method of claim 1, further comprising exposing one or more gold bond wires of the semiconductor package via the laser ablating and the acid etching.
10. The method of claim 1, wherein exposing the silver bond wires comprises exposing one or more silver bond wires coupled between a first die and a second die of the semiconductor package.
11. The method of claim 1, wherein the laser ablating comprises executing a plurality of scans of the semiconductor package to laser ablate until the threshold amount of the encapsulant remains.
12. The method of claim 11, wherein the threshold amount of the encapsulant is substantially one micron thick.
13. A system comprising: a first workspace environment comprising: a laser to laser ablate mold compound from a semiconductor package; and a controller coupled to the laser to control the laser to execute a plurality of scans to laser ablate the mold compound to a threshold level; and a second workspace environment comprising: a hot plate; and a fume hood adapted about the hot plate, wherein the laser ablated semiconductor package is to be adapted to the hot plate and to be acid etched to expose one or more die and one or more silver bond wires of the semiconductor package, wherein a total time of exposure of the semiconductor package to the acid etch is less than two minutes.
14. The system of claim 13, wherein the controller is to control the laser to laser ablate the mold compound to the threshold level at which the one or more die of the semiconductor package remain covered with at least a portion of the mold compound.
15. The system of claim 13, wherein the controller is to control the laser to have a first power, a first current, and a first scan angle for the laser ablation.
16. The system of claim 13, further comprising a non-transitory storage medium comprising instructions, wherein the controller is to execute the instructions to cause the laser to execute the plurality of scans.
17. The system of claim 13, wherein the first workspace environment comprises a support assembly on which the semiconductor package is to be adapted.
18. The system of claim 17, wherein during the laser ablation, the laser is positioned at an angle of approximately 90 degrees with respect to the support assembly.
19. The system of claim 13, further comprising sonication means for sonicating the semiconductor device after the acid etch.
20. The system of claim 19, further comprising rinsing means for rinsing the semiconductor device after the acid etch.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0015] In various embodiments, a decapsulation technique is provided to preserve intact bond wires, including silver (Ag) bond wires inside a packaged semiconductor device, after a mold compound or other encapsulant is removed to expose one or more die. This technique preserves the electrical characteristics of the device for further electrical testing, fault isolation, etc. Decapsulating devices typically involves the use of acids such as fuming nitric acid, sulfuric acid, etc. Such acids attack bond wires and cause them to break during the decapsulation process, and conventional acid etch processes can be particularly deleterious for silver bond wires.
[0016] More particularly, in an embodiment a two-step decapsulation technique is provided for Ag wire-included devices. The first step involves using a laser to ablate the encapsulant materials above the die, creating a several micron deep well. The laser settings (e.g., power, current, scan angle) may be adjusted so that a number of laser run scans are executed to remove several thin layers of mold compound for better control. At the end of this first step, a threshold thickness (e.g., approximately 1 micron (um) thick layer) of mold compound remains above the die. That is, this first step process may be controlled to ensure that not all mold compound above the die is removed, since the laser could damage an exposed die.
[0017] The second step involves a minimal acid etch process (e.g., several drops of fuming nitric acid (f-HNO.sub.3)) (e.g., 95% fuming nitric acid) to remove the remaining thin layer of mold compound to reveal the die surface. The laser-ablated device is placed on a hot plate with a temperature of 55-65 degrees Celsius. A drop of f-HNO.sub.3 is placed in the well created by the laser and etching of the remaining mold compound is allowed to run for a minimal time duration (e.g., 20 seconds). The partially etched device is rinsed (e.g., with acetone), sonicated (e.g., in a beaker of acetone), and then placed on the hot plate to evaporate the acetone. Blowing air to dry off the acetone is possible as long as the Ag wires do not get disturbed. Subsequent drops of f-HNO.sub.3 may be used as desired to entirely expose the die. For these iterative acid etch processes, the acid etching time may be reduced to 5 seconds or less, such that total time of exposure to acid etching is less than two minutes, and in many examples less than a minute.
[0018] This two-step technique is a low cost and efficient method for Ag wire decapsulation. In contrast, a conventional decapsulation tool to decapsulate devices with Ag wires can cost between $500,000 and $1,000,000. All bond wire integrity can be preserved using embodiments. Still further, the entire process takes less than an hour and minimal acid waste is generated. In contrast, conventional decapsulation processes may take longer and can incur much greater amounts of acid waste, e.g., 16 ounces or more per semiconductor package.
[0019] With embodiments, silver bond wires may be exposed and their integrity preserved. In addition, one or more die of a device can be fully/partially exposed. In this way, electrical fault isolation is possible (partially exposing the die may be sufficient so long as a region of interest is not covered by mold compound). In one scenario, a defect may be suspected to be on the die, and thus exposing the die with the silver bond wires preserved for electrical fault isolation/characterization may occur. In another scenario, the device may be failing due to defective silver bond wire itself, or due to improper ball bond formation on a bond pad, such that fully exposing the silver bond wires while preserving their integrity may occur for inspection with microscope.
[0020] Referring now to
[0021] In the stylized view shown in
[0022] In the embodiment shown, laser 120 may be automatically controlled by a controller 140, which may be implemented as a computer or other dedicated controller to control movement, intensity and so forth of laser 130. In an embodiment, controller 140 may control power, current, frequency, wavelength, speed, pulse width, scan angle, number of scans, scan overlap percent, unidirectional/bidirectional scan of laser 120. To this end, controller 140 may include a microcontroller unit 142 that may execute instructions stored in one or more of a memory 144 and a non-volatile memory 146. In embodiments herein, a user may program controller 140 with a control program to cause laser 130 to dynamically scan across a top surface of semiconductor device 120 to remove a desired amount of the package material, which may be formed of a mold compound or other encapsulant. Understand while shown at this high level in the embodiment of
[0023] Referring now to
[0024] Referring now to
[0025] Still referring to
[0026] Still with reference to
[0027] Referring now to
[0028] Referring now to
[0029] As shown in
[0030] Referring now to
[0031] As illustrated in inset 420, a given bond wire 430 is fully intact, and has not been undesirably etched via a conventional acid etch process. Instead with a two-step decapsulation technique as described herein, complete electrical functionality of bond wires 430 remain, allowing a full range of testing or other debug operations to occur.
[0032] While the present disclosure has been described with respect to a limited number of implementations, those skilled in the art, having the benefit of this disclosure, will appreciate numerous modifications and variations therefrom. It is intended that the appended claims cover all such modifications and variations.