Abstract
Due to today’s trend towards ‘green’ products, the environmentally conscious manufacturers are moving toward lead-free schemes for electronic devices and components. Nowadays the bumping process has become a branch of the infrastructure of flip chip bonding technology. However, the formation of excessively brittle intermetallic compound (IMC) between under bump metallurgy (UBM)/solder bump interface influences the strength of solder bumps within flip chips, and may create a package reliability issue. Based on the above reason, this study investigated the mechanical behavior of lead-free solder bumps affected by the solder/UBM IMC formation in the duration of isothermal aging. To attain the objective, the test vehicles of Sn–Ag (lead-free) and Sn–Pb solder bump systems designed in different solder volumes as well as UBM diameters were used to experimentally characterize their mechanical behavior. It is worth to mention that, to study the IMC growth mechanism and the mechanical behavior of a electroplated solder bump on a Ti/Cu/Ni UBM layer fabricated on a copper chip, the test vehicles are composed of, from bottom to top, a copper metal pad on silicon substrate, a Ti/Cu/Ni UBM layer and electroplated solder bumps. By way of metallurgical microscope and scanning-electron-microscope (SEM) observation, the interfacial microstructure of test vehicles was measured and analyzed. In addition, a bump shear test was utilized to determine the strength of solder bumps. Different shear displacement rates were selected to study the time-dependent failure mechanism of the solder bumps. The results indicated that after isothermal aging treatment at 150 °C for over 1000 h, the Sn–Ag solder revealed a better maintenance of bump strength than that of the Sn–Pb solder, and the Sn–Pb solder showed a higher IMC growth rate than that of Sn–Ag solder. In addition, it was concluded that the test vehicles of copper chip with the selected Ti/Cu/Ni UBMs showed good bump strength in both the Sn–Ag and Sn–Pb systems as the IMC grows. Furthermore, the study of shear displacement rate effect on the solder bump strength indicates that the analysis of bump strength versus thermal aging time should be identified as a qualitative analysis for solder bump strength determination rather than a quantitative one. In terms of the solder bump volume and the UBM size effects, neither the Sn–Ag nor the Sn–Pb solders showed any significant effect on the IMC growth rate.
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