Abstract

A microwave transmitter/receiver using the low-temperature co-fired ceramic substrate and ball grid array packaging demonstrates superior properties, including high integration, miniaturization, and high electromagnetic shielding. However, it holds limitations of inadequate hermeticity (that is, gas or moist impermeability), high cost, and low reproducibility. In this work, we aim to overcome these difficulties by introducing a new packing technique. The packaging utilizes an electroless plated Ni/Pd/Au surface, resulting in a significant enhancement of the packaging hermeticity by orders of magnitude, approaching the level of <5 × 10-9 Pa·m3/s. Both Sn63Pb37 and Au80Sn20 solder alloys demonstrate exceptional solderability, attributed to Pd atoms diffusing to the Au layer during soldering at 310 °C. A reliability test of the packaging shows that the shear strength of the solder balls drops after thermal shocks but negligibly affects the hermeticity of the packaging. Furthermore, a meticulously designed internal vertical interconnect structure and I/O interconnections were engineered in the ball grid array packaging, showcasing excellent transmission characteristics within the 10-40 GHz frequency range while ensuring effective isolation between ports.

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