Impedance controlled electrical interconnection employing meta-materials
10483209 ยท 2019-11-19
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H05K1/0243
ELECTRICITY
H01L2224/48472
ELECTRICITY
H01L2224/45014
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/20751
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/20753
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/20751
ELECTRICITY
H01L2224/49111
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/20755
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/20755
ELECTRICITY
H01L24/50
ELECTRICITY
H01L2224/48135
ELECTRICITY
H01L2223/6627
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/00
ELECTRICITY
H01L24/91
ELECTRICITY
H01L2224/48472
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/20752
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/00
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/00014
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/20753
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/20752
ELECTRICITY
H01L2224/48699
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/20754
ELECTRICITY
H01L2224/49111
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/00014
ELECTRICITY
H01L2224/45014
ELECTRICITY
H01L23/5226
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/20754
ELECTRICITY
H01L2224/48599
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01L23/538
ELECTRICITY
H01L23/522
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A method of improving electrical interconnections between two electrical elements is made available by providing a meta-material overlay in conjunction with the electrical interconnection. The meta-material overlay is designed to make the electrical signal propagating via the electrical interconnection to act as though the permittivity and permeability of the dielectric medium within which the electrical interconnection is formed are different than the real component permittivity and permeability of the dielectric medium surrounding the electrical interconnection. In some instances the permittivity and permeability resulting from the meta-material cause the signal to propagate as if the permittivity and permeability have negative values. Accordingly the method provides for electrical interconnections possessing enhanced control and stability of impedance, reduced noise, and reduced loss. Alternative embodiments of the meta-material overlay provide, the enhancements for conventional discrete wire bonds while also facilitating single integrated designs compatible with tape implementation.
Claims
1. A device comprising: a plurality of layers to be secured to provide electrical interconnection between a plurality of first bond pads of a first device and a plurality of second bond pads of a second device, wherein the plurality of layers includes: a first conductor layer arranged to extend continuously along a portion of a length of the first device and the second device, such that the first conductor layer physically contacts the plurality of first bond pads of the first device and the plurality of second bond pads of the second device when secured; a second conductor layer disposed over the first conductor layer, wherein the second conductor layer includes a plurality of electrically independent conductors arranged to span a length that is about the portion of the length of the first device and the second device when secured; and a third conductor layer disposed over the second conductor layer, such that the second conductor layer is disposed between the first conductor layer and the third conductor layer, wherein the third conductor layer is arranged to extend continuously along the portion of the length of the first device and the second device when secured.
2. The device of claim 1, wherein the plurality of electrically independent conductors are a first plurality of electrically independent conductors, and the plurality of layers further includes a fourth conductor layer disposed between the third conductor layer and the second conductor layer, wherein the fourth conductor layer includes a second plurality of electrically independent conductors arranged to span a length that is about the portion of the length of the first device and the second device when secured.
3. The device of claim 2, wherein each conductor of the second plurality of electrically independent conductors has a substantially linear shape and is arranged to extend substantially parallel to the portion of the length of the first device and the second device when secured.
4. The device of claim 1, wherein the plurality of electrically independent conductors includes concentrically-shaped metal features arranged in an array in the second conductor layer.
5. The device of claim 4, wherein the concentrically-shaped metal features each include a first set of two parallel lines and a second set of three parallel lines arranged perpendicular to the first set of two parallel lines, and wherein two lines of the second set of three parallel lines are aligned and physically separated from each other.
6. The device of claim 1, wherein the plurality of layers further includes a resin material, wherein the second conductor layer is disposed in the resin material.
7. The device of claim 1, wherein the plurality of layers includes a via structure that connects the first conductor layer to the third conductor layer.
8. The device of claim 1, wherein the third conductor layer is electrically connected to a ground contact of the first device or the second device.
9. The device of claim 1, wherein the third conductor layer extends beyond the plurality of layers, such that the third conductor layer physically contacts a bonding pad of the first device or the second device when secured.
10. A device comprising: a seven-layer meta-material overlay for providing electrical interconnection between at least one bonding area of the first device and at least one bonding area of the second device, wherein the seven-layer meta-material overlay includes: a first conductor layer having a length that is about a length of the seven-layer meta-material overlay, wherein the first conductor layer is configured to physically contact the at least one bonding area of the first device and the at least one bonding area of the second device; a first insulator layer disposed over the first conductor layer; a second conductor layer disposed over the first insulator layer, wherein the second conductor layer includes an array of concentrically-shaped conductors and further wherein the array of concentrically-shaped conductors has a length that is about the length of the seven-layer meta-material overlay; a second insulator layer disposed over the second conductor layer; a third conductor layer disposed over the second insulator layer, wherein the third conductor layer includes an array of linear-shaped conductors and further wherein the array of linear-shaped conductors has a length that is about the length of the seven-layer meta-material overlay; a third insulator layer disposed over the third conductor layer; and a fourth conductor layer disposed over the third insulator layer, wherein the fourth conductor layer has a length that is about the length of the seven-layer meta-material overlay.
11. The device of claim 10, wherein the second conductor layer and the third conductor layer include an insulating material, wherein the array of concentrically-shaped conductors and the array of linear-shaped conductors are disposed in the insulating material.
12. The device of claim 10, wherein each of the concentrically-shaped conductors is rectangular-shaped.
13. The device of claim 10, further comprising a via that extends through the seven-layer meta-material overlay, such that the via connects the first conductor layer to the fourth conductor layer.
14. The device of claim 10, wherein the seven-layer meta-material overlay is a first seven-layer meta-material overlay providing electrical interconnection between a first bonding area of the first device and a first bonding area of the second device, the device further comprising: a second seven-layer meta-material overlay providing electrical interconnection between a second bonding area of the first device and a second bonding area of the second device.
15. The device of claim 14, wherein layers of the second seven-layer meta-material overlay are configured the same as layers of the first seven-layer meta-material overlay.
16. The device of claim 14, wherein layers of the second seven-layer meta-material are configured different than layers of the first seven-layer meta-material overlay.
17. The device of claim 14, wherein: the first bonding area of the first device and the first bonding area of the second device each include more than one bonding pad; and the second bonding area of the first device and the second bonding area of the second device each include one bonding pad.
18. A device comprising: a multi-layer meta-material overlay for providing electrical interconnection between at least one bonding area of a first device and at least one bonding area of a second device, wherein the multi-layer meta-material overlay includes: an electrical trace layer having a length that is about a length of the multi-layer meta-material overlay, wherein the electrical trace layer is configured to physically connect to the at least one bonding area of the first device and the at least one bonding area of the second device when the multi-layer meta-material overlay is secured to the first device and the second device; a conductor layer disposed over the electrical trace layer, wherein the conductor layer includes an array of concentrically-shaped conductors, wherein a length of the array of concentrically-shaped conductors is about the length of the multi-layer meta-material overlay; and a signal conductor plane disposed over the conductor layer, wherein the signal conductor plane is configured to physically connect to ground when the multi-layer meta-material overlay is secured to the first device and the second device.
19. The device of claim 18, wherein the multi-layer meta-material overlay further includes a conductive feature that connects the electrical trace layer to the signal conductor plane.
20. The device of claim 18, wherein a length of the signal conductor plane is greater than a length of the multi-layer meta-material overlay.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Exemplary embodiments of the invention will now be described in conjunction with the following drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION
(16) Illustrated in
(17) A prior art layered wire bond approach to controlling impedance of the wire bonds according to Grellman et al is shown in layered interconnection 200 in
(18) Now referring to
(19) The requirement for multiple bonds per bond wire of Kwark and Grellman presented above in respect of
(20) However, now disposed over the wire bonds 430 is a ground arch 470 providing a capacitive correction for the inductive impedance of the wire bond 430. The ground arch 470 has disposed on its lower inner surface a dielectric 480, to prevent shorting of the ground arch 470 to the wire bond 430 in the event of deformation of the ground arch 470 or detachment of the wire bond 430. The ground arch 470 is electrically connected to the ground plane connection 450 by a conductive epoxy 460. As noted supra, to provide 50 impedance for the wire bond, as opposed to 120 without the ground arch 470, the separation L490 between the wire bond 430 and the ground arch 470, is 32 m. As noted supra the ground arch 470 does not provide flexibility in implementing multiple bond wire impedances simultaneously, does not support multiple bond pad locations within the footprint of the semiconductor die 410 unless spaced consistently in a row at fixed distance from the periphery of the semiconductor die 410, and does not support very low impedances, which for example are required to interconnect multiple high frequency semiconductor devices such as low noise GaAs, InP or SiGe amplifiers within microwave MCMs.
(21) As such shown in
(22) Though current approaches to impedance matching rely on positive impedance, it is also possible to use negative impedances to perform impedance matching. A. F. Starr et al. write in their paper titled, Fabrication and Characterization of a Negative-Refractive-Index Composite Meta-Material, Physical Review B 70, 113102 (2004) of the American Physical Society, while there have not been many suggested paths toward the design of a material whose effective index-of-refraction is negative, a rigorous approach is to design a material whose electric permittivity () and magnetic permeability () are simultaneously negative. While there are no known naturally occurring materials or compounds that exhibit simultaneously negative and , such materials can be designed to provide effective and , as derived from effective medium arguments, which are singly or both negative over a finite frequency band.
(23) Unlike Wyland, as presented supra in
(24) Referring to
(25) A cross-sectional view of a first exemplary meta-material substrate 700 is shown in
(26) Upon layer 5 (755L5) there is a further layer 6 (755L6) of insulating material 750 of 100 m thickness. Thus, for an exemplary embodiment the meta-material is implemented as the addition of two metallic layers 755L3 and 755L5 into the conventional ground plane 730 (755L1) and insulator material 750 of a copper tape.
(27) Alternative embodiments with reduced or additional processing complexity are optionally implemented to provide the meta-material substrate 700. One such alternative embodiment is presented in
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(29) In the exemplary embodiments presented supra the meta-material overlay (such as meta-material overlay 700, 600 or 560) is separate from the wire bonds. Alternatively, the meta-material overlay may be implemented as a complete electrical interconnection. Such an arrangement is shown in
(30) Also shown is second seven-layer meta-material 920, of length L920, which provides interconnection for a single electrical interconnection between a first bond pad 520 and a second bond pad 540. Optionally, the second seven-layer meta-material 920 has variations in the thickness, composition, and layout for the layers 911 through 916 with respect to the first seven-layer meta-material 910. This second design optionally: reduces material consumption by addressing only specific interconnections; provides specific bandwidth performance; or provides specific impedance characteristics, meta-material overlay shape characteristics or interconnection distance characteristics that are different from those of the first seven-layer meta-material 910.
(31) The exemplary seven-layer meta-materials 910 and 920 require the attachment of electrical traces disposed within electrical trace layer 917 (the electrical traces replacing the discrete wire bonds 530) to the first and second bond pads 520 and 540 respectively. Similarly, the signal conductor plane 911 requires electrical interconnection to at least one of the two ground contacts provided within at least the first and second devices 510 and 550. Exemplary approaches to providing these electrical interconnections from the exemplary seven-layer meta-material overlay of
(32) Referring to first cross-section 1000A the 7-layer meta-material overlay 910 is shown overlaid on a bond pad, either first bond pad 520 or second bond pad 540, comprising metallization 1010 on a substrate 1020. The electrical trace layer 917 is shown in contact with the metallization 1010, such contact being implemented by standard techniques including conductive adhesive and solder. Second cross-section 1000B shows a first electrical interconnection of the signal conductor plane 911 of the seven-layer meta-material overlay 910 to a metallization 1010 on substrate 1020. As shown, the direct connection from the metallization 1010 to the seven-layer meta-material overlay 910 is a via metallization 1030 which forms a discrete portion of the electrical trace layer 917. The via metallization 1030 is electrically connected to the signal conductor plane 911 through a via 1040 which routes through first insulating layer 916, first conductor layer 915, second insulating layer 914, second conductor layer 913, third insulating layer 912, and signal conductor plane 911.
(33) The via metallization 1030 to metallization 1010 contact is implemented by standard techniques such as outlined supra. The formation of via 1040 as outlined is compatible with industry standard techniques for the fabrication of the seven-layer meta-material overlay 910 as a variant of tape used within tape automated bonding (TAB). An alternate embodiment of the seven-layer meta-material overlay 910 is shown with third cross-section 1000C, which removes the via metallization 1030, offering a simplified interconnection for the signal conductor plane 911. As shown, in this embodiment the seven-layer meta-material overlay 910 interconnects the electrical trace layer 917 to a bond pad 1010 on a substrate 1020 in a manner similar to that in the first cross-section 100OA. The signal conductor plane 911, rather than terminating proximate to bond pad 1010 as in the previous cross-sections, extends with a free region 1050 formed to interconnect with a signal plane bond pad 1060. This interconnection is made via standard techniques such as those providing interconnection of electrical trace layer 917 to bond pad 1010 outlined supra, but optionally includes thermo-compression wedge bonding or other variants of bonding.
(34) The exemplary embodiments supra employ either six-layer or seven-layer meta-material, the latter incorporating the electrical trace layer into the layer arrangement and thereby removing the requirement for separate wire bonds. In some instances the electrical signals are sensitive to noise arising from coupling from electrical interconnections in proximity to the overlay, or the electrical interconnections over which the overlay lies are sensitive to noise coupled from the overlay electrical traces. Further, in some instances the tolerances for implementing an overlay or the absolute magnitude of the desired impedance reach a threshold where an alternative overlay implementation is appropriate. In these situations a 13-layer meta-material overlay 1100, such as shown in
(35) As shown the 13-layer meta-material overlay 1100 comprises a lower six-layer meta-material structure 1155 A, electrical trace layer 1110, and upper six-layer meta-material structures 1155B. The lower six-layer meta-material structure 1155A formed from first signal conductor plane 1155L1 A, first insulating layer 1155L2A, straight sections of metal 720 in first conductor layer 1155L3A, second insulating layer 1155L4A, metallic conductors 725 in second conductor layer 1155L5A, and third insulating layer 1155L6A.
(36) The upper six-layer meta-material structure 1155B is formed from second signal conductor plane 1155L1B, fourth insulating layer 1155L2B, straight sections of metal 720 in third conductor layer 1155L3B, fifth insulating layer 1155L4B, metallic conductors 725 in fourth conductor layer 1155L5B, and sixth insulating layer 1155L6B.
(37) Throughout the exemplary embodiments supra the deployment scenarios for each of the meta-material overlays have been presented in respect of replacing wire bonds between the peripheries of first and second devices; including but not limited to semiconductor die, package, and printed circuit boards. Alternatively, the meta-material overlay is configured to provide an overlay to electrical interconnections disposed within the footprint of the package, semiconductor die, etc. Three such exemplary deployments of a meta-material overlay with respect to a semiconductor circuit within a package are shown in
(38) First cross-section 1200A depicts a scenario wherein a meta-material overlay 1210 lands directly onto the upper surface of a semiconductor die 550, originating on the left upper surface 510A of a circuit package, not shown for clarity, and terminating on the right upper surface of the circuit package 51OB. As such the meta-material overlay 1210 forms two arcurate surfaces under which are bond wires 530. Each arcurate surface 1210A and 1210B is approximately parallel to its respective bond wire 530 for a substantial portion of the length of the bond wire 530. Whilst this exemplary cross-section 1200A depicts the meta-material overlay 1210 forming two arcurate surfaces, alternative embodiments may offer three or more such regions to provide the requisite impedance control for the bond wire interfaces either across a single die or an MCM. Further, the overlay is optionally shaped prior to deployment according to the requirements of the design or shaped during placement and bonding. Also, the meta-material overlay optionally is designed to not interconnect to the upper surface of the semiconductor die 550, but be spaced away with an air gap.
(39) An alternative embodiment provides for the number of arcurate surfaces to vary according to position, such that for a portion of the interconnections there is a single arcurate surface whilst for other portions there are two, three or more arcurate surfaces. Also whilst the meta-material overlay 1210 is shown as a six-layer meta-material overlay, such as six-layer meta-material overlay 560, alternatives include but are not limited to the seven-layer and 13-layer meta-material overlays described supra such as the seven-layer meta-material overlay 910 and the 13-layer meta-material overlay 1100.
(40) In second cross-section 1200B the meta-material overlay 1220 is again employed for impedance control of bond wires 530 between the upper surface of semiconductor die 550 and left and right upper surfaces 510A of a circuit package, not shown for clarity. The upper surface of semiconductor die 550 includes landing zone 1230, upon which the meta-material overlay 1220 is interconnected rather than interfacing directly to the upper surface of the semiconductor die 550. The landing zone 1230 vertically offsets the meta-material overlay 1220 over the semiconductor die 550, thereby modifying the shape of the arcurate surfaces 1220A and 1220B. Landing zone 1230 is formed according to standard semiconductor processes from a range of dielectric materials and metals, according to the requirements of the semiconductor die 550 and whether an electrical interconnection to the signal conductor plane of the meta-material overlay is made in the landing zone 1230. Typical materials for the landing zone 1230 include silicon dioxide, silicon nitride, silicon oxynitride, spin-on-glass, bisbenzocyclobutene, gold, and aluminum, each of these being optionally employed discretely or in combination.
(41) Now referring to the third cross-section 1200C, the meta-material overlay 1240 again provides an overlay for the left wire bond 540A, originating on the left upper surface 510A of the circuit package, over semiconductor die 550, and for right wire bond 540B terminating on the right upper surface 510B of the circuit package. In contrast to first and second cross-sections 1200A and 1200B the meta-material overlay 1240 provides a single arcurate surface, wherein the left and right surface portions 1240A and 1240B are approximately parallel to wire bonds 540A and 540B for a predetermined region of each. Hence, whilst meta-material overlay 1240 typically does not provide as controlled an impedance environment for the wire bonds 540A and 540B when compared to the meta-material overlays 1220 and 1210 of first and second cross-sections 1200A and 1200B respectively, the formation of the structure in situ has reduced complexity. Accordingly the exemplary deployment embodiment in the third cross-section 1200C presents a different tradeoff between cost of implementation and performance to that of the first and second cross-sections 1200A and 1200B respectively.
(42) Now referring to
(43) Second curve 1320 plots the results for a single 14,500 m bond wire length according to the prior art of Wyland [U.S. Pat. No. 7,217,997] wherein a ground arch is placed over the bond wire with air dielectric. In contrast to the single discrete bond wire, the second curve 1320 drops approximately linearly until 2 GHz and then flattens out to a maximum loss of approximately 1.6 dB at 2.6 GHz. Shown finally is third curve 1330, representing an exemplary electrical interconnection according to an embodiment of the invention wherein a meta-material overlay is employed in conjunction with the 14,500 m bond wire. Now the loss increases approximately linearly to a maximum loss of approximately 1 dB at 2.2 GHz whereupon it decreases to a loss of approximately 0.6 dB at 4 GHz.
(44) The effectiveness of the exemplary embodiment against the prior art is clearly evident. For example at 3.3 GHz the third curve 1330 shows a loss of only 0.75 dB versus 3 dB for the discrete bond wire in first curve 1310, a 2.25 dB improvement; and an improvement of 0.6 dB from 1.55 dB to 0.95 dB when compared to second curve 1320 for the bond wire with an electrical ground plane.
(45) Numerous other embodiments may be envisaged without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention.