Abstract

In the past decade, we have witnessed the significant increase of gold price. Coupled with continuous price decrease of electronic products, the reduction of gold consumption has been explored in every possible area. This paper is related to reducing gold consumption on wire bonding pads of low density interconnect substrates. A layer of gold is plated on the substrate pads with typical minimum thickness of 0.5um to facilitate wire bonding process using gold wire. The objective of this study was to reduce gold thickness on the substrate pad to 0.3um minimum without compromising wire bond integrity. DOE considering different substrate sources wire bonded by different assembly suppliers were conducted. Wire bonding process optimization was followed by package level reliability stress testing, heat aging, and board level solder joint reliability testing was carried out for validation. The results showed plated gold thickness on the wire bond substrate pads can be reduced to a minimum of 0.3um without compromising package reliability performance. With the success of thinner gold on the substrate pads, we can use the same natural resources - gold to build more units, 'better for environment, if we consume less'

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