Abstract
The gold price has continuously climbing since 2000 and is currently recorded at historical high at above USD1350 per ounce in October 2010 as compared to USD1000 per ounce one year ago. Gold wire bonding has been the primary wire interconnecting method used in the semiconductor packaging industry for more than 50 years. Gold wire historically represented about 20-25% of the package cost. With the ever increasing gold price, this ratio now can be as high as 30-35% of the package cost and does not look like there is a relief in sight. Replacing gold wire with copper wire has become a necessity in order to maintain low assembly cost for wire bonded parts. Copper wire has many benefits including low cost, high electrical and thermal conductivities and excellent reliability with aluminum pad metallization. Heavy gauge copper wire has been used in consumer products and semiconductor discrete products for a long time. Many commercial product sectors began thin gauge copper wire in production since 2008. Automotive customers are also forced to look for cheaper interconnecting alternative, such as copper wire as an example. One of the issues in qualifying copper wire for automotive customers with stringent reliability requirements is that no industrial standard has been agreed or published to define copper wire qualification requirements. Presently most companies still apply gold wire reliability requirement to qualify copper wire packages. Many of them extend the gold wire package reliability stress duration for copper wire as a safety factor during the qualification. Our study is aimed for the assembly solution to apply copper wires on low-k-copper wafers with aggressive Freescale Bond Over Active (BOA) rules to meet automotive qualification requirements of Automotive Electronics Council (AEC) grade 1 and grade 0. Two types of bonding surfaces were used in this study, namely the conventional aluminum bond pad and aluminum bond pad remetallized with Nickel / Palladium / Gold Over Pad Metallurgy (OPM). Since Cu-Al and Cu-Au systems are completely different from Au-Al system, the difficulty in applying the same Au wire standards to copper wire parts will be discussed. A new approach to defining the pass/ fail criteria for copper wire parts will be proposed in this study. Units assembled with fine gauge copper wire were submitted through extensive stress conditions in order to demonstrate the excellent package reliability performance.
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