2024

Vol.31 No.3

Editorial Office

Review

  • Journal of the Microelectronics and Packaging Society
  • Volume 27(1); 2020
  • Article

Review

Journal of the Microelectronics and Packaging Society 2020;27(1):17-24. Published online: May, 26, 2020

Cu-SiO2 Hybrid Bonding

  • Hankyeol Seo1, Haesung Park2, and Sarah Eunkyung Kim1,†
    1Department of Mechanical Engineering, Seoul National University of Science and Technology, 2Graduate School of Nano-IT Design Convergence, Seoul National University of Science and Technology
Corresponding author E-mail: eunkyung@seoultech.ac.kr
Abstract

As an interconnect scaling faces a technical bottleneck, the device stacking technologies have been developed for miniaturization, low cost and high performance. To manufacture a stacked device structure, a vertical interconnect becomes a key process to enable signal and power integrities. Most bonding materials used in stacked structures are currently solder or Cu pillar with Sn cap, but copper is emerging as the most important bonding material due to finepitch patternability and high electrical performance. Copper bonding has advantages such as CMOS compatible process, high electrical and thermal conductivities, and excellent mechanical integrity, but it has major disadvantages of high bonding temperature, quick oxidation, and planarization requirement. There are many copper bonding processes such as dielectric bonding, copper direct bonding, copper-oxide hybrid bonding, copper-polymer hybrid bonding, etc.. As copper bonding evolves, copper-oxide hybrid bonding is considered as the most promising bonding process for vertically stacked device structure. This paper reviews current research trends of copper bonding focusing on the key process of Cu-SiO2 hybrid bonding.

Keywords Copper Bonding, Hybrid Bonding, Interconnect, 3D Packaging