Title :
Experimental investigation of bare silicon wafer warp
Author :
Draney, Nathan R. ; Liu, Jun Jun ; Jiang, Tom
Author_Institution :
Micron Technol., Boise, ID, USA
Abstract :
IC packaging trends demand smaller packaging, which translates to thinner silicon; in some cases as thin as 50 μm. Thinning below 305 μm induces significant warp in product/metal wafers, which continues to increases as wafers are thinned further. Increased wafer warp results in handling/processing issues. Studies have been performed on product/metal wafers to characterize warp. These studies have shown a linear relationship between wafer warp and 1/thicknessß2. Several factors, in combination, have been shown to contribute to warp in product/metal wafers such as: metal layers, polyimide layers, BCB layers, metal density, thermal stress, tilt direction, front side tension, backside tension, and gravity. The wafer warp phenomenon observed in product/metal wafers is also observed in bare silicon wafers. The difference between bare silicon test wafers and product wafers is the layering of the circuitry side on product/metal wafers, which has shown to be a large contributor to wafer warp. Damage to the wafer backside during conventional grinding can induce a large amount of warp in both product/metal and bare silicon wafers.
Keywords :
grinding; semiconductor technology; surface treatment; 305 mm; 50 micron; BCB layers; IC packaging; Si; backside tension; bare silicon wafer warp; front side tension; gravity; grinding damage; metal density; metal layers; polyimide layers; product/metal wafers; thermal stress; tilt direction; wafer backside damage; wafer thickness; wafer thinning; Abrasives; Circuit testing; Crystallization; Dry etching; Integrated circuit packaging; Laboratories; Silicon; Thermal stresses; Wet etching; Wheels;
Conference_Titel :
Microelectronics and Electron Devices, 2004 IEEE Workshop on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8369-9
DOI :
10.1109/WMED.2004.1297371