Integrated circuit packaging
In electronics manufacturing, integrated circuit packaging is the final stage of semiconductor device fabrication, in which the block of semiconductor material is encapsulated in a supporting case that prevents physical damage and corrosion. The case, known as a "package", supports the electrical contacts which connect the device to a circuit board.
In the integrated circuit industry, the process is often referred to as packaging. Other names include semiconductor device assembly, assembly, encapsulation or sealing.
The packaging stage is followed by testing of the integrated circuit.
The term is sometimes confused with electronic packaging, which is the mounting and interconnecting of integrated circuits onto printed-circuit boards.
Design considerations
Electrical
The current-carrying traces that run out of the die, through the package, and into the printed circuit board have very different electrical properties compared to on-chip signals. They require special design techniques and need much more electric power than signals confined to the chip itself. Therefore, it is important that the materials used as electrical contacts exhibit characteristics like low resistance, low capacitance and low inductance. Both the structure and materials must prioritize signal transmission properties, while minimizing any parasitic elements that could negatively affect the signal.Controlling these characteristics is becoming increasingly important as the rest of technology begins to speed up. Packaging delays have the potential to make up almost half of a high-performance computer's delay, and this bottleneck on speed is expected to increase.
Mechanical and thermal
The integrated circuit package must resist physical breakage,keep out moisture, and also provide effective heat dissipation from the chip. It must also interconnect the chip to a PCB. The materials of the package are plastic or ceramic. Both materials offer usable mechanical strength, moisture and heat resistance. For some devices ceramic packages are required for strength, pin count, heat dissipation or other reasons, but ceramic packages are more expensive than a similar plastic package.Some packages have metallic fins to enhance heat transfer, but these take up space. Larger pacakges also allow for more interconnecting pins.
Economic
Cost is a factor in selection of integrated circuit packaging. Typically, an inexpensive plastic package can dissipate heat up to 2W, which is sufficient for many simple applications, though a similar ceramic package can dissipate up to 50W in the same scenario. As the chips inside the package get smaller and faster, they also tend to get hotter. As the subsequent need for more effective heat dissipation increases, the cost of packaging rises along with it. Generally, the smaller and more complex the package needs to be, the more expensive it is to manufacture.History
The earliest integrated circuits were packaged in ceramic flat packs, which the military used for many years for their reliability and small size. The other type of packaging used in the 1970s, called the ICP, was the ceramic package, with the conductors on one side, co-axially with the package axe.Commercial circuit packaging quickly moved to the dual in-line package, first in ceramic and later in plastic. In the 1980s VLSI pin counts exceeded the practical limit for DIP packaging, leading to pin grid array and leadless chip carrier packages. Surface mount packaging appeared in the early 1980s and became popular in the late 1980s, using finer lead pitch with leads formed as either gull-wing or J-lead, as exemplified by small-outline integrated circuit — a carrier which occupies an area about 30 – 50% less than an equivalent DIP, with a typical thickness that is 70% less.The next big innovation was the area array package, which places the interconnection terminals throughout the surface area of the package, providing a greater number of connections than previous package types where only the outer perimeter is used. The first area array package was a ceramic pin grid array package. Not long after, the plastic ball grid array, another type of area array package, became one of the most commonly used packaging techniques.
In the late 1990s, plastic quad flat pack and thin small-outline packages replaced PGA packages as the most common for high pin count devices, though PGA packages are still often used for microprocessors. However, industry leaders Intel and AMD transitioned in the 2000s from PGA packages to land grid array packages.
Ball grid array packages have existed since the 1970s, but evolved into flip-chip ball grid array packages in the 1990s. FCBGA packages allow for much higher pin count than any existing package types. In an FCBGA package, the die is mounted upside-down and connects to the package balls via a substrate that is similar to a printed-circuit board rather than by wires. FCBGA packages allow an array of input-output signals to be distributed over the entire die rather than being confined to the die periphery.
Traces out of the die, through the package, and into the printed circuit board have very different electrical properties, compared to on-chip signals. They require special design techniques and need much more electric power than signals confined to the chip itself.
Recent developments consist of stacking multiple dies in single package called SiP, for System In Package, or three-dimensional integrated circuit. Combining multiple dies on a small substrate, often ceramic, is called an MCM, or Multi-Chip Module. The boundary between a big MCM and a small printed circuit board is sometimes blurry.
Common package types
- Through-hole technology
- Surface-mount technology
- Chip carrier
- Pin grid array
- Flat package
- Small Outline Integrated Circuit
- Chip-scale package
- Ball grid array
- Transistor, diode, small pin count IC packages
- Multi-chip packages
Operations
The following operations are performed at the packaging stage, as broken down into bonding, encapsulation, and wafer bonding steps. Note that this list is not all-inclusive and not all of these operations are performed for every package, as the process is highly dependent on the package type.
- IC bonding
- *Wire bonding
- *Thermosonic Bonding
- *Down bonding
- *Tape-automated bonding
- *Flip chip
- *Quilt packaging
- *Tab bonding
- *Film attaching
- *Spacer attaching
- IC encapsulation
- *Baking
- *Plating
- *Lasermarking
- *Trim and form
- Wafer bonding