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A study of thermo-mechanical stress and its impact on through-silicon vias
167
Citations
18
References
2008
Year
EngineeringMechanical EngineeringNormal Bosch ProcessSilicon On InsulatorThermo-mechanical StressAdvanced Packaging (Semiconductors)Electronic PackagingThermomechanical AnalysisMaterials ScienceMaterials EngineeringElectrical Engineering3D Ic ArchitectureChip AttachmentSolid MechanicsSemiconductor Device FabricationHeat TransferMicroelectronicsBosch Etch ProcessMicrostructureMicrofabricationStress-induced Leakage CurrentApplied PhysicsSidewall RoughnessThermal EngineeringMechanics Of MaterialsThrough-silicon Vias
The BOSCH etch process, which is commonly used in microelectromechanical system fabrication, has been extensively investigated in this work for implementation in through-silicon via (TSV) technology for 3D-microsystems packaging. The present work focuses on thermo-mechanical stresses caused by thermal loading due to post-TSV processes and their impact on the electrical performance of through-silicon copper interconnects. A test vehicle with deep silicon copper-plated comb structure was designed to study and evaluate different deep silicon via etch processes and its effect on the electrical leakage characteristics under various electrical and thermal stress conditions. It has been shown that the leakage current between the comb interconnect structures increases with an increase in sidewall roughness and that it can be significantly lowered by smoothening the sidewalls. It was also shown that by tailoring a non-BOSCH etch process with the normal BOSCH process, a similar leakage current reduction can be achieved. It was also shown through thermo-mechanical simulation studies that there is a clear correlation between high leakage current behavior due to non-uniform Ta barrier deposition over the rough sidewalls and the thermo-mechanical stress induced by post-TSV processes.
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