Abstract

The through-silicon via (TSV) approach is crucial for three-dimensional integrated circuit (3-D IC) packaging technology. However, there are still several challenges in the TSV fabrication process. One of the widely known challenges is via protrusion phenomenon. Annealing a TSV wafer makes the copper (Cu) TSVs under high stress and may form a protrusion where the Cu is extruded out of the TSV structure. The phenomenon occurs because of the large mismatch in the coefficient of thermal expansion between Cu via and silicon (Si) layer. Cu protrusion is able to cause crack, delamination of the back-end-of-line and short circuit of the chip, thus, it is a dangerous threat to the metal layer interconnect. Experiments are conducted to characterize the protrusion using several techniques. Scanning electron microscope is used to observe the protrusion topography and measure the height. Electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) technique is implemented to study the grain size distribution, local texture and microstructure evolution inside Cu vias. For the experiment, arrays of 10 μm diameter TSVs are fabricated and annealed in argon gas environment in six different temperatures. In this paper, finite element analysis (FEA) is carried out to study the Cu protrusion under different annealing conditions. Correlation between numerical results and experimental data is then performed. Based on the verified FEA methodology, several parametric studies are then conducted, including the effects of annealing temperature on Cu protrusion, residual stress distributions of TSV structures. The simulation results are helpful to understand and solve the key problem in TSV fabrication process and reliability challenge.

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