industry news
Subscribe Now

Alchimer Discloses Major TSV Barrier Film Advance; 100 Percent Step Coverage Boosts Fill Speed and Quality

TAIPEI, Taiwan – A new film-deposition technology advance from Alchimer S.A. promises to cut fill deposition times and provide new options for the electronics packaging industry as it struggles to bring through-silicon vias (TSVs) into cost-effective production.

Alchimer today disclosed that its AquiVia TSV barrier-layer process has the ability to provide uniform, guaranteed 100 percent step coverage over complex silicon topography, including high-aspect-ratio vias with scalloped walls. The barrier layer is one of the bottom-most elements in the TSV film stack. Alchimer’s unprecedented coverage capability means that subsequent depositions can be done in significantly less time and at lower cost, as they do not have to remediate problems in the barrier layer.

The 100 percent coverage also eliminates a range of coverage-related performance and reliability problems that can occur during subsequent seed-layer and fill deposition.

TSV technology is widely seen as a central enabler for 3D integration processes, which will allow multiple chips to be stacked and interconnected. This is an ideal solution for packing more computing power, memory, and other functions into extremely small devices, such as smartphones, tablet computers and other portable electronics.

Step coverage is the ratio of the thickness of a metallization film on the bottom of a TSV to the film’s thickness on the top, or flat surface.

 “Existing etch technologies, used to create TSVs, have many good qualities, but they tend to create scalloping, steps, and other surface features that pose real challenges for subsequent film deposition,” said Claudio Truzzi, Alchimer’s chief technical officer. “Legacy vacuum-based deposition processes have been unable to put down high-quality barrier layers, especially in deep, small-diameter vias with aspect ratios of 10:1 and beyond – and these ratios are needed to fully realize the economic advantages of 3D integration.

 “Poor-quality barrier layers lead directly to electromigration, poor fill results, and high-resistance pathways in interconnect circuits, all of which affect the performance and reliability of high-value 3D assemblies,” explained Truzzi. “This new demonstration of 100 percent coverage shows that our barrier films are uniform across the sides and bottom of vias, even when stair-step patterns and scalloping are present. As a result, subsequent layers can go down over an ideal foundation, in significantly less time, which provides an additional economic improvement.”

AquiVia Barrier and Alchimer’s entire suite of wet deposition products offer a combination of conformality, step coverage and purity that cannot be matched by PVD, CVD, or other dry processes, with costs 40 to 50 percent lower than standard dry processes. Customers may choose a single film or any combination of films and fills, based on their application needs.

MEET ALCHIMER AT SEMICON TAIWAN: 

Alchimer will be exhibiting with their Taiwanese partner, Kromax, at Booth 672, Sept. 7-9, 2011. Please visit them there for an in-depth briefing and to learn more about Alchimer’s wet deposition technology. In addition, Alchimer will present at a DigiTimes workshop on optimum 3D TSV structures and processes, on the afternoon of Sept. 7th at the Grand Hyatt, Taipei.

About Alchimer S.A.

Alchimer develops and markets innovative chemical formulations, processes and IP for the deposition of nanometric films used in a variety of microelectronic and MEMS applications, including wafer-level interconnects and TSVs (through-silicon vias) for 3D packaging. The company’s breakthrough technology, Electrografting (eG™), is an electrochemical-based process that enables the growth of very thin coatings, of various types, onboth conducting and semiconducting surfaces. Alchimer’s potential was initially recognized by the Strategic Industrial Innovation Programme of OSEO, which supports state-of-the-art technologies with a high likelihood of commercialization, and the company was spun off from the Commissariat à l’Energie Atomique (CEA) in 2001. Based in Massy, France, it won the First National Award for the Creation of High Tech Companies from the French Minister of Research and Industry and is a Red Herring Top 100 European Company. Visit alchimer.com.

Leave a Reply

featured blogs
Dec 19, 2024
Explore Concurrent Multiprotocol and examine the distinctions between CMP single channel, CMP with concurrent listening, and CMP with BLE Dynamic Multiprotocol....
Dec 20, 2024
Do you think the proton is formed from three quarks? Think again. It may be made from five, two of which are heavier than the proton itself!...

Libby's Lab

Libby's Lab - Scopes Out Littelfuse's SRP1 Solid State Relays

Sponsored by Mouser Electronics and Littelfuse

In this episode of Libby's Lab, Libby and Demo investigate quiet, reliable SRP1 solid state relays from Littelfuse availavble on Mouser.com. These multi-purpose relays give engineers a reliable, high-endurance alternative to mechanical relays that provide silent operation and superior uptime.

Click here for more information about Littelfuse SRP1 High-Endurance Solid-State Relays

featured chalk talk

ROHM’s 3rd Gen 650V IGBT for a Wide range of Applications: RGW and RGWS Series
In this episode of Chalk Talk, Amelia Dalton and Heath Ogurisu from ROHM Semiconductor investigate the benefits of ROHM Semiconductor’s RGW and RGWS Series of IGBTs. They explore how the soft switching of these hybrid IGBTs contribute to energy savings and power generation efficiency and why these IGBTs provide a well-balanced solution for switching and cost.
Jun 5, 2024
33,780 views