CHIP ARRANGEMENT
20230361076 · 2023-11-09
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01L2224/83203
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/07811
ELECTRICITY
H01L2224/32225
ELECTRICITY
H01L2224/2929
ELECTRICITY
H01L24/00
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
A chip arrangement including a carrier, a chip having at least one chip pad, and a bonding agent to fasten the chip pad on the carrier, the bonding agent having solder material and an anisotropic conductive adhesive.
Claims
1. A chip arrangement, comprising: a carrier; a chip having at least one chip pad; and a bonding agent to fasten the chip pad on the carrier, the bonding agent comprising solder material and an anisotropic conductive adhesive.
2. The chip arrangement as claimed in claim 1, wherein the chip comprises a plurality of chip pads.
3. The chip arrangement as claimed in claim 1, wherein the chip comprises at least four chip pads.
4. The chip arrangement as claimed in claim 1, wherein the carrier is free of a solder stop structure or free of a flux.
5. The chip arrangement as claimed in claim 1, wherein the anisotropic conductive adhesive comprises metal particles, the metal particles being made of a metal different than the metal of the solder material.
6. The chip arrangement as claimed in claim 1, wherein the carrier comprises a metal on a carrier surface on which the at least one chip pad is fastened by means of the bonding agent.
7. The chip arrangement as claimed in claim 6, wherein the metal of the carrier comprises at least one of a group of metals on its carrier surface, the group consisting of gold, palladium, and Miralloy®.
8. The chip arrangement as claimed in claim 1, wherein a melting point of the solder material lies in a temperature range for curing the anisotropic conductive adhesive.
9. A chip card comprising: a chip card body; and a chip arrangement as claimed in claim 1, which is arranged in or on the chip card body.
10. A method for producing a chip arrangement, the method comprising: applying a chip pad on a carrier using a bonding agent, the bonding agent comprising a solder material and an anisotropic conductive adhesive; and melting the solder material in order to connect the chip pad to the carrier.
11. The method as claimed in claim 10, wherein the application is carried out during the melting of the solder material with additional exertion of pressure.
12. The method as claimed in claim 10, further comprising: arranging the anisotropic conductive adhesive on the carrier before the application of the chip pad.
13. The method as claimed in claim 10, further comprising: arranging the solder material on the chip pad or arranging the solder material on the anisotropic conductive adhesive that is arranged on the carrier, before the application of the chip pad on the carrier.
14. The method as claimed in claim 10, further comprising: curing the anisotropic conductive adhesive.
15. The method as claimed in claim 14, wherein a melting point of the solder material lies in a temperature range for the curing of the anisotropic conductive adhesive, so that the melting of the solder material and curing of the adhesive take place simultaneously.
16. The method as claimed in claim 10, wherein the carrier is free of a solder stop structure or free of a flux.
17. The method as claimed in claim 12, wherein the anisotropic conductive adhesive is applied surface-wide on the carrier.
18. The method as claimed in claim 10, wherein the anisotropic conductive adhesive comprises metal particles made of a metal different than the metal of the solder material.
19. The method as claimed in claim 10, wherein the carrier comprises a metal on a carrier surface on which the chip pad is fastened using the bonding agent.
20. A method for producing a chip card, comprising: forming a chip arrangement using the method as claimed in claim 10; and arranging the chip arrangement on or in a chip card body.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0020] Exemplary embodiments of the disclosure are represented in the figures and will be explained in more detail below.
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
[0026]
[0027]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0028] In the following detailed description, reference is made to the appended drawings, which form part of this description and in which specific embodiments, in which the subject matter of the disclosure may be carried out, are shown for illustration. In this regard, direction terminology such as “up”, “down”, “forward”, “backward”, “front”, “rear”, etc. is used with reference to the orientation of the figure or figures being described. Since components of exemplary embodiments may be positioned in a number of different orientations, the direction terminology is used for illustration and is in no way restrictive. It is to be understood that other exemplary embodiments may be used and structural or logical changes may be carried out, without departing from the protective scope of the present disclosure. It is to be understood that the features of the various exemplary embodiments described herein may be combined with one another unless otherwise specifically indicated. The following detailed description is therefore not to be interpreted in a restrictive sense, and the protective scope of the present invention is defined by the appended claims.
[0029] In the scope of this description, the terms “connected”, “attached” and “coupled” are used to describe both direct and indirect connection, direct or indirect attachment and direct or indirect coupling. In the figures, elements which are identical or similar are provided with identical references insofar as this is useful.
[0030] In various exemplary embodiments, a chip arrangement is provided which, for connecting a chip to a carrier, uses a bonding agent that comprises both an anisotropic conductive adhesive (or an anisotropic conductive bonding agent) and a solder material.
[0031] At first sight, it seems illogical to use both a solder material and an anisotropic conductive adhesive because, in principle, both the conductive adhesive and the solder material on their own would be suitable for producing an electrically conductive bonding connection.
[0032] However, tests have shown that the combination of the anisotropic conductive adhesive with the solder material has several advantages: [0033] 1) The electrically conductive and mechanically robust connection can be produced on almost any conventional chip pad material and almost any conventional carrier metal structure material (including for example on Miralloy®). [0034] 2) No flux is needed for producing the connection. [0035] 3) Flow of solder material away can be reduced or prevented. According to experiments, the retention of the solder material may possibly be attributed primarily to the electrically conductive particles in the anisotropic conductive adhesive. The conductive particles may, for example, comprise nickel. Because the anisotropic conductive adhesive prevents the solder material from flowing away, a solder stop mask can be obviated and it is possible to increase the process window for curing the adhesive, for example a temperature range, a processing time, an application pressure and the like. [0036] 4) In general, an application pressure may be reduced compared with a bonding agent that comprises only the anisotropic conductive adhesive (and likewise in comparison with a connecting by means of contact bumps and nonconductive adhesive, which is suitable only for some chip geometries anyway). The reduced application pressure can mean that damage due to a locally excessive application pressure and/or bulging of contact locations on the rear side are/is less likely. [0037] 5) With a suitable selection of the materials, the soldering and the curing of the anisotropic conductive adhesive can be carried out in a single step, for example by means of a device already optionally used at present for soldering or for curing, for example an FCOS curing station (FCOS stands for “Flip Chip on Substrate”, and therefore for the chip being mounted the other way round, that is to say with its contact pads facing toward the carrier).
[0038]
[0039] The carrier 104 comprises a metal at least in a contact region in which an electrically conductive connection to the chip pad 108 of the chip 102 is produced, or is intended to be produced. The carrier 104 may itself provide a carrying or supporting function for the chip 102, or the carrier 104, 106 may comprise a (supporting) carrier 106 (which is for example nonconductive) in addition to the carrier 104 (which is at least partially made of metal and is therefore also sometimes referred to here as a metal structure 104).
[0040] In one exemplary application case, the carrier 104, 106 may comprise a carrier tape, for example consisting of a plastic, for example polyimide, as the supporting carrier 106 and may be the metal structure 104 of the carrier 104, 106, which may for example comprise gold, palladium, Miralloy® (a copper-tin or copper-tin-zinc alloy) or other metals or alloys typically used for contact areas on carriers 104, 106, possibly with a coating, for example a nickel layer 104C.
[0041] In one typical exemplary embodiment, the chip arrangement 200 may be a chip card module which is configured to be arranged in a chip card, for example for contact-based use of the chip card.
[0042] In such a case or other cases, the at least one chip pad 108 may comprise a multiplicity of chip pads (for example one chip pad 108 per active contact-based contact, for example at least four chip pads 108).
[0043] The at least one chip pad 108 may for example comprise gold, palladium, Miralloy® or other metals or alloys typically used for chip pads 108.
[0044] The chip arrangement 200 may furthermore comprise a bonding agent 222 for fastening the chip pad 108 on the carrier 104, 106.
[0045] In various exemplary embodiments, the bonding agent 222 may comprise solder material 110 and an anisotropic conductive adhesive 112.
[0046] The anisotropic conductive adhesive 112 may comprise a bonding material 112A and electrically conductive particles 112P embedded therein, for example nickel particles or particles of another conductive material, for example another metal. The electrically conductive particles 112P may typically have diameters in a range of about 5 μm to about 10 μm.
[0047] In various exemplary embodiments, the anisotropic conductive adhesive may be configured to cure at a temperature in a range of about 140° C. to about 170° C., for example by the temperature being maintained for several seconds, for example between 6 and 9 seconds.
[0048] The solder material 110 may be a solder material typically used for producing a solder connection between a chip pad 108 and a carrier 104, 106. For example, a bismuth-tin (SnBi) solder material may be used, for example with a composition of 42 percent by weight of tin and 58 percent by weight of bismuth.
[0049] The metal of the solder material 110 may be a metal different than that of the electrically conductive particles 112P of the anisotropic conductive adhesive 112.
[0050] With a combination of the solder material 110 described by way of example with the anisotropic conductive adhesive 112 described by way of example as the bonding agent 222, it is advantageous that the curing temperature of the anisotropic conductive adhesive 112 forms a range that comprises the melting temperature of the solder material 110. Accordingly, it is possible to carry out the soldering process and the curing process simultaneously as a joint process.
[0051]
[0052] Structures represented in
[0053] In the methods illustrated in
[0054] In
[0055] In various exemplary embodiments, the anisotropic conductive adhesive 112 may be applied surface-wide on the entire carrier 104, 106, including a multiplicity of metal structures 104, for example likewise by means of a dispenser or by means of other methods, for example by means of printing, blade coating or other widely known methods. During the application, the anisotropic conductive adhesive 112 may for example be in the form of a paste.
[0056] The solder material 110 may subsequently be applied, for example onto the anisotropic conductive adhesive 112, for example as represented in
[0057] The arrangement of the solder material 110 is the essential difference between the method represented in
[0058] For example, as represented in
[0059] The arrangement of the solder material on the chip pad 108 may, for example, take place at the wafer level, that is to say before singulation of the chips 102.
[0060] As represented in
[0061] At the same time, the carrier 104, 106 and the chip 102 may be pressed against one another (represented as F).
[0062] The molten solder material 110 can displace the bonding agent 112A of the anisotropic conductive adhesive 112, which is still liquid at that time, at least partially (for example in the direction of the edge of the carrier 104, 106), at least partially encapsulate the electrically conductive particles 112P and/or become connected to them, and form an electrically conductive connection between the chip pad 108 and the electrically conductive carrier 104. With continued heating in a temperature range that is required for the curing of the anisotropic conductive adhesive 112, the anisotropic conductive adhesive 112 finally cures. During cooling, the solder material 110 hardens.
[0063] The carrier 104, 106 and the chip pad 108 are therefore connected to one another mechanically stably and electrically conductively, without a flux or a solder stop mask having been needed and without significant amounts of the solder 110 flowing away from the contact region.
[0064]
[0065] The chip card 500 comprises a chip card body 550 and a chip arrangement 200 according to various exemplary embodiments, for example as described above, for example in connection with
[0066]
[0067] The method comprises applying a chip pad on a carrier by means of a bonding agent, the bonding agent comprising a solder material and an anisotropic conductive adhesive (610), and melting the solder material in order to connect the chip pad to the carrier (620).
[0068] Some exemplary embodiments will be summarized below.
[0069] Exemplary Embodiment 1 is a chip arrangement. The chip arrangement comprises a carrier, a chip having at least one chip pad, and a bonding agent for fastening the chip pad on the carrier, the bonding agent comprising solder material and an anisotropic conductive adhesive.
[0070] Exemplary Embodiment 2 is a chip arrangement according to Exemplary Embodiment 1, wherein the chip comprises a multiplicity of chip pads.
[0071] Exemplary Embodiment 3 is a chip arrangement according to Exemplary Embodiment 1 or 2, wherein the chip comprises at least four chip pads.
[0072] Exemplary Embodiment 4 is a chip arrangement according to one of Exemplary Embodiments 1 to 3, wherein the carrier is free of a solder stop structure and/or free of a flux.
[0073] Exemplary Embodiment 5 is a chip arrangement according to one of Exemplary Embodiments 1 to 4, wherein the anisotropic conductive adhesive comprises metal particles, the metal particles being made of a metal different than the metal of the solder material.
[0074] Exemplary Embodiment 6 is a chip arrangement according to one of Exemplary Embodiments 1 to 5, wherein the carrier comprises a metal on a carrier surface on which the at least one chip pad is fastened by means of the bonding agent.
[0075] Exemplary Embodiment 7 is a chip arrangement according to Exemplary Embodiment 6, wherein the metal of the carrier comprises at least one of a group of metals on its carrier surface, the group consisting of gold, palladium and Miralloy®.
[0076] Exemplary Embodiment 8 is a chip arrangement according to one of Exemplary Embodiments 1 to 7, wherein the melting point of the solder material lies in a temperature range for the curing of the anisotropic conductive adhesive.
[0077] Exemplary Embodiment 9 is a chip card. The chip card comprises a chip card body and a chip arrangement according to one of Exemplary Embodiments 1 to 8, which is arranged in or on the chip card body.
[0078] Exemplary Embodiment 10 is a method for producing a chip arrangement. The method comprises applying a chip pad on a carrier by means of a bonding agent, the bonding agent comprising a solder material and an anisotropic conductive adhesive, and melting the solder material in order to connect the chip pad to the carrier.
[0079] Exemplary Embodiment 11 is a method according to Exemplary Embodiment 10, wherein the application is carried out during the melting of the solder material with additional exertion of pressure.
[0080] Exemplary Embodiment 12 is a method according to Exemplary Embodiment 10 or 11, furthermore comprising arranging the anisotropic conductive adhesive on the carrier before the application of the chip pad.
[0081] Exemplary Embodiment 13 is a method according to one of Exemplary Embodiments 10 to 12, furthermore comprising arranging the solder material on the chip pad or arranging the solder material on the anisotropic conductive adhesive that is arranged on the carrier, before the application of the chip pad on the carrier.
[0082] Exemplary Embodiment 14 is a method according to one of Exemplary Embodiments 10 to 13, furthermore comprising curing the anisotropic conductive adhesive.
[0083] Exemplary Embodiment 15 is a method according to Exemplary Embodiment 14, wherein the melting point of the solder material lies in a temperature range for the curing of the anisotropic conductive adhesive, so that the melting of the solder material and the curing of the adhesive take place simultaneously.
[0084] Exemplary Embodiment 16 is a method according to one of Exemplary Embodiments 10 to 15, wherein the chip arrangement furthermore comprises a chip that comprises the chip pad.
[0085] Exemplary Embodiment 17 is a method according to Exemplary Embodiment 16, wherein the chip comprises a multiplicity of chip pads.
[0086] Exemplary Embodiment 18 is a method according to Exemplary Embodiment 16 or 17, wherein the chip comprises at least four chip pads.
[0087] Exemplary Embodiment 19 is a method according to one of Exemplary Embodiments 10 to 18, wherein the carrier is free of a solder stop structure and/or free of a flux.
[0088] Exemplary Embodiment 20 is a method according to Exemplary Embodiment 12, wherein the anisotropic conductive adhesive is applied surface-wide on the carrier.
[0089] Exemplary Embodiment 21 is a method according to one of Exemplary Embodiments 10 to 20, wherein the anisotropic conductive adhesive comprises metal particles, the metal particles being made of a metal different than the metal of the solder material.
[0090] Exemplary Embodiment 22 is a method according to one of Exemplary Embodiments 10 to 21, wherein the carrier comprises a metal on a carrier surface on which the at least one chip pad is fastened by means of the bonding agent.
[0091] Exemplary Embodiment 23 is a method according to Exemplary Embodiment 22, wherein the metal of the carrier comprises at least one of a group of metals on its carrier surface, the group consisting of gold, palladium and Miralloy®.
[0092] Exemplary Embodiment 24 is a method for producing a chip card, which comprises forming a chip arrangement by means of the method according to one of Exemplary Embodiments 10 to 23 and arranging the chip arrangement on or in the chip card body.
[0093] Further advantageous configurations of the device may be found from the description of the method, and vice versa.