Abstract

Currently, the demand by new application scenarios of increasing operating device temperatures in power systems is requiring new die-attach materials with higher melting points and suitable thermomechanical properties. This makes the die-attach material selection, die-attaching process, and thermomechanical evaluation a real challenge in nowadays power packaging technology. This paper presents a comparative analysis of the thermomechanical performance of high-temperature die-attach materials (sintered nano-Ag, AuGe, and PbSnAg) under harsh thermal cycling tests. This study is carried out using a test vehicle formed by four dice (considering Si and SiC semiconductors) and Cu substrates. Thermally cycled test vehicles have been thermomechanically evaluated using die-shear tests and acoustic microscopy inspections. Besides, special attention is paid to set up a nano-Ag sintering process, in which the effects of sintering pressure or substrate surface state (roughness and surface activation) on the die-attach layer are analyzed. As a main result, this study shows that the best die-attach adherence is obtained for nano-Ag when pressure is applied on the dice (using a specifically designed press) during the sintering process (11 MPa provided die-shear forces of 53 kgf). However, this die-attach presents a faster thermomechanical degradation under harsh thermal cycling tests than other considered high-temperature die-attach materials (AuGe and PbSnAg) and PbSnAg shows the best thermomechanical performances.

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