Abstract

ABSTRACTAs telecommunication equipment that supports high-level information networks is being made portable, the requirements for telecommunication equipment to be small and lightweight are becoming stricter. Thus, miniaturization of semiconductor devices is necessary, and wafer dicing and chip thinning technologies are important key technologies to achieve it. Wafers are thinned by mechanical in-feed grinding using a grindstone containing diamond particles, and wafers are divided by mechanical blade dicing using a diamond blade. However, mechanical processes using diamond grits leave damage such as chipping, saw mark or residual strain on chip surfaces; thus, chip strength decreases. At chip thicknesses of 50 to 200 μm, such damage has to be avoided.In this study, the relationship between chip residual damage and chip strength is examined, and novel wafer dicing and thinning technologies that realize an average chip strength have increased from 253 MPa to 1903 MPa are described.

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