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New
Polymer Could Improve Semiconductor Manufacturing, Packaging
Monday, January 28, 2008
Researchers
in Rensselaer’s Department of Physics and Center for
Integrated Electronics have developed a new inexpensive,
quick-drying polymer that could lead to dramatic cost
savings and efficiency gains in semiconductor manufacturing
and computer chip packaging. In this scanning electron
microscope image of PES in a UV-imprint lithography
application, the well-defined pattern indicates the
material’s potential for use in next-generation chip
making techniques.
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Credit:
Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute
Researchers at Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute and Polyset Company have developed a new
inexpensive, quick-drying polymer that could lead to dramatic
cost savings and efficiency gains in semiconductor manufacturing
and computer chip packaging.
Along with allowing enhanced
performance and cost savings for conventional photolithography
processes, the new material, called polyset epoxy siloxane (PES),
should also enable a new generation of lower-cost, on-chip
nanoimprinting lithography technology, according to the
researchers.
“With this new material,
chip manufacturers will be able to trim several steps from their
production and packaging processes, and in turn realize a cost
savings,” said Toh-Ming Lu, the R.P. Baker Distinguished
Professor of Physics at Rensselaer, who oversaw the study. “PES
is cheaper and more reliable.”
Lu’s research was
published this week in the Journal
of Vacuum Science and Technology B.
The widely adopted technique of
photolithography involves using a mix of light and chemicals to
generate intricate micro- and nano-scale patterns on tiny areas
of silicon. As part of the process, a thin polymer film —
called a redistribution layer, and crucial to the effectiveness
of device — is deposited onto the silicon wafer, in order
to ease the signal propagation delay and to protect the chip from
different environmental and mechanical factors.
The new PES material developed
by Lu’s group and Polyset Company is one such thin polymer
film, and it offers several advantages over the incumbent
materials typically used in the semiconductor manufacturing
industry. In addition, their new PES material can also be used as
a thin polymer film for ultraviolet (UV) on-chip nanoimprinting
lithography technology, which is still in the early phases of
development. The consistency of using PES in conventional
technology, and then continuing to use PES while academia and
industry test and gradually migrate to the next generation of
devices, should help ease the transition, Lu said.
“Having the ability to
use one material — our new PES — for both
photolithography and imprint will be very attractive to
manufacturers,” Lu said. “At its core, our project is
basic research, but it also has important industry implications.
It’s very exciting.”
Manufacturers today typically
use benzocyclobutene and polyimide as polymers for redistribution
layers, because of their low water absorption, thermal stability,
low curing temperature, low thermal expansion, low dielectric
constant, and low leakage current. Lu said PES offers significant
advantages to these materials, particularly in the areas of cure
temperature and water uptake.
PES cures, or dries and
hardens, at 165 degrees Celsius, about 35 percent cooler than the
other two materials. The need for less heat should translate
directly into lower overhead costs for manufacturers, Lu said.
Another advantage of PES is its low water uptake rate of less
than 0.2 percent, less than the other materials. Additionally,
PES adheres well to copper and can easily be made less brittle if
needed. All of these attributes make PES a promising candidate
for redistribution layer application and UV imprint lithography.
“The results demonstrate
that PES is feasible to be used as UV-curable resist for both the
redistribution application for electronic packaging and
micro/nano imprint lithography,” said Rensselaer Research
Associate Pei-I Wang, co-author of the paper.
Along with photolithography and
on-chip nanoimprinting lithography, PES holds the potential for
applications in other optical devices, flat-panel display,
biotechnology devices, and microelectromechanical systems, Wang
said.
In addition to Lu and Wang,
co-authors on the paper include Rensselaer materials science and
engineering professor Omkaram Nalamasu, who is also chief
technical officer of Applied Materials Inc. in Santa Clara,
Calif.; Rajat Ghoshal and Ram Ghoshal of Polyset Co. Inc. in
Mechanicville, N.Y.; Charles Schaper of Transfer Devices Inc. in
Santa Clara, Calif.; and Andrew Li of Applied Materials.
The project was funded through
the New York State Foundation for Science, Technology and
Innovation.
Lu’s research was
conducted as part of Rensselaer’s Center for Integrated
Electronics. The center’s multidisciplinary team of more
than 50 faculty researchers and 100 graduate students aims to
advance the role of electronic devices of our everyday lives by
accelerating the production of the next generation of micro- and
nanoelectronic devices and systems. The Center's mission is to
build integrated top-down and bottom-up nanostructures, devices,
and systems for information, biological, and broadband
communication applications. Major activities include pioneering
research into gigascale interconnects, 3-D interconnect
structures, materials properties and process modeling, wideband
gap semiconductors and devices, terahertz devices and imaging
systems, power electronic devices and systems, and biochips.
Source:
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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