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Eutectic bonding

Eutectic bonding, also referred to as eutectic soldering, describes a wafer bonding technique with an intermediate metal layer that can produce a eutectic system. Those eutectic metals are alloys that transform directly from solid to liquid state, or vice versa from liquid to solid state, at a specific composition and temperature without passing a two-phase equilibrium, i.e. liquid and solid state. The fact that the eutectic temperature can be much lower than the melting temperature of the two or more pure elements can be important in eutectic bonding.

Ultrasonic image of a blank Au-Si eutectic bonded wafer [1]
Ultrasonic image of a patterned Au-Si eutectic bonded wafer [1]

Eutectic alloys are deposited by sputtering, dual source evaporation or electroplating. They can also be formed by diffusion reactions of pure materials and subsequently melting of the eutectic composition.[2]

Eutectic bonding to transfer epitaxial materials such as GaAs-AlGaAs onto Si substrates with a high degree of success, for the general purpose of optoelectronics integration with Si electronics as well as to overcome fundamental issues such as lattice mismatch in hetero-epitaxy, was developed and reported by Venkatasubramanian et al. in 1992. [3] The device performance validation of such eutectic metal bonded GaAs-AlGaAs materials for solar cells were further reported by Venkatasubramanian et al. in 1994. [4] Eutectic bonding is able to produce hermetically sealed packages and electrical interconnection within a single process (compare ultrasonic images). In addition this procedure is conducting at low processing temperatures, low resultant stress induced in final assembly, high bonding strength, large fabrication yield and a good reliability. Those attributes are dependent on the coefficient of thermal expansion between the substrates.[1]

The most important parameters for eutectic bonding are:

  • bonding temperature
  • bonding duration
  • tool pressure

Overview edit

Eutectic bonding is based on the ability of silicon (Si) to alloy with numerous metals and form a eutectic system. The most established eutectic formations are Si with gold (Au) or with aluminium (Al).[5] This bonding procedure is most commonly used for Si or glass wafers that are coated with an Au/Al film and partly with adhesive layer (compare with following image).

 
Bonding of Si wafer to (l) glass or (r) silicon wafer coated with Au or Al layer.[5]

The Si-Au couple has the advantages of an exceptionally low eutectic temperature, an already widespread use in die bonding and the compatibility with Al interconnects.[6] Additionally, often used eutectic alloys for wafer bonding in semiconductor fabrication are shown in the table. Choosing the correct alloy is determined by the processing temperature and compatibility of the materials used.[7]

Commonly used eutectic alloys
Eutectic alloy Eutectic composition Eutectic temperature
Au-In 0.6 / 99.4 wt-% 156 °C
Cu-Sn 5 / 95 wt-% 231 °C
Au-Sn[8] 80 / 20 wt-% 280 °C
Au-Ge 72 / 28 wt-% 361 °C
Au-Si 97.15 / 2.85 wt-% 370 °C
Al-Ge[9] 49 / 51 wt-% 419 °C
Al-Si 87.5 / 12.5 wt-% 580 °C
 
Si-Au phase diagram.[1]

Further, the bonding has less restrictions, concerning substrate roughness and planarity than direct bonding. Compared to anodic bonding, no high voltages are required that can be detrimental to electrostatic MEMS. Additionally, the eutectic bonding procedure promotes a better out-gassing and hermeticity than bonding with organic intermediate layers.[10] Compared to glass frit bonding, the advantage sticks out that the reduction of seal ring geometries, an increase of the hermeticity levels and a shrinking of device size is possible. The geometry of eutectic seals is characterized by a thickness of 1 - 5 µm and a wideness of > 50 µm. The use of eutectic alloy brings the advantage of providing electrical conduction and interfacing with redistribution layers.

The temperature of the eutectic bonding procedure is dependent on the used material. The bonding happens at a specific weight-% and temperature, e.g. 370 °C at 2.85 wt-% Si for Au intermediate layer (compare to phase diagram).[5]

The procedure of eutectic bonding is divided into following steps:[11]

  1. Substrate processing
  2. Conditioning prior to bonding (e.g. oxide removal)
  3. Bonding process (Temperature, Mechanical Pressure for a few minutes)
  4. Cooling process

Procedural steps edit

Pre-treatment edit

The surface preparation is the most important step to accomplish a successful eutectic bonding. This bonding procedure is due to oxide presence on the silicon substrates very limited based on the poor wettability of Au on the oxide layer. This leads to a poor adhesion of the eutectic bond. The oxide on the silicon surface acts as a diffusion barrier.[6] The surface preparation's main task is to facilitate the deposition of the eutectic metal by oxide removal or adhesion layer deposition.[12]

To remove existing native oxide layers wet chemical etching (HF clean), dry chemical etching or chemical vapor deposition (CVD) with different types of crystals can be used. Also some applications require a surface pre-treatment using dry oxide removal processes, e.g. H2 plasma and CF4 plasma.[1]

An additional method for the removal of unwanted surface films, i.e. oxide, is applying ultrasound during attachment process.[13] As soon the tool is lowered a relative vibration between the wafer and the substrate is applied. Commonly, industrial bonders use ultrasonic with 60 Hz vibration frequencies and 100 µm vibration amplitude.[14] A successful oxide removal results in a solid, hermetically tight connection.[5]

 
Scheme of typical wafer composition including an optional layer of Ni/Pt.

A Second method to ensure the eutectic metal adheres on the Si wafer is by using an adhesion layer. This thin intermediate metal layer adheres well to the oxide and the eutectic metal. Well suitable metals for an Au-Si compound are titanium (Ti) and chromium (Cr) resulting in, e.g. Si-SiO2-Ti-Au or Si-SiO2-Cr-Au. The adhesion layer is used to break up the oxide by diffusion of silicon into the used material. A typical wafer is composed of a silicon wafer with oxide, 30 - 200 nm Ti or Cr layer and Au layer of > 500 nm thickness.

In the wafer fabrication a nickel (Ni) or a platinum (Pt) layer is added between the gold and the substrate wafer as diffusion barrier.[10] The diffusion barrier avoids interaction between Au and Ti/Cr and requires higher temperatures to form a reliable and uniform bond. Further, the very limited solubility of silicon in titanium and chromium can prevent the developing of Au-Si eutectic composition based on the diffusion of silicon through titanium into gold.[6]

The eutectic materials and optional adhesion layers are usually approached by deposition as alloy in one layer by dual component electroplating, dual-source evaporation (physical vapor deposition) or composite alloy sputtering.[12]

The removal of contamination, on the for silicon most established Au layer, is usually realized with water flushing and wafer heating.[1]

Bonding process edit

The contacting of the substrates is applied directly after the pre-treatment of the surfaces to avoid oxide regeneration. The bonding procedure for oxidizing metals (not Au) generally takes place in a reduced atmosphere of 4% hydrogen and an inert carrier gas flow, e.g. nitrogen. The requirements for the bonding equipment lies in the thermal and pressure uniformity across the wafer. This enables uniformly compressed seal lines.[2]

The substrate is aligned and fixed on a heated stage and the silicon wafer in a heated tool. The substrates inserted in the bonding chamber are contacted maintaining the alignment. As soon the layers are in atomic contact the reaction between those starts. To support the reaction mechanical pressure is applied and heating above the eutectic temperature is carried out.[1]

The diffusivity and solubility of gold into silicon substrate increases with rising bonding temperatures. A higher temperature than the eutectic temperature is usually preferred for the bonding procedure. This may result in the formation of a thicker Au-Si alloy layer and further a stronger eutectic bond.[15]

The diffusion starts as soon as the layers are in atomic contact at elevated temperatures.[1] The contacted surface layer containing the eutectic composites melts, forming a liquid phase alloy, accelerating further mixing processes and diffusion until the saturation composition is reached.[16][17]

Other common eutectic bonding alloys commonly used for wafer bonding include Au-Sn, Al-Ge, Au-Ge, Au-In and Cu-Sn.[9]

The chosen bonding temperature usually is some degrees higher than the eutectic temperature so the melt becomes less viscous and readily flows due to higher roughness to surface areas that are not in atomic contact.[12] To prevent the melt pressed outside the bonding interface the optimization of the bonding parameter control is necessary, e.g. low force on the wafers. Otherwise, it may lead to short circuits or device malfunctions of the used components (electrical and mechanical).[1] The heating of the wafers leads to a change in the surface texture due to formation of fine silicon micro structures on top of the gold surface.[17]

Cooling process edit

 
Cross-section SEM image of the bonding interface between Si and Au with 80.3 Si atom percentage.[1]

The material mix is solidified when the temperature decreases below eutectic point or the concentration ratio changes (for Si-Au: T < 370 °C).[1] The solidification leads to epitaxial growth of silicon and gold on top of the silicon substrate resulting in numerous small silicon islands protruding from a polycrystalline gold alloy (compare to cross-section image of the bonding interface).[6] This can result in bonding strengths around 70 MPa.

The importance lies in the appropriate process parameters, i.e. sufficient bonding temperature control.[17] Otherwise the bond cracks due to stress caused by a mismatch of the thermal expansion coefficient. This stress is able to relax over time.[6]

Examples edit

Based on the high bonding strength this procedure is special applicable for pressure sensors or fluidics. Also smart micro mechanical sensors and actuators with electronic and/or micro mechanical functions over multiple wafers can be fabricated.[17]

Technical specifications edit

Materials

Substrate:

  • Si-Si
  • Si-glass w. adhesive layer

Intermediate layer:

  • Au
  • Ag
Temperature
  • Au: 375 °C
  • Al: 570 °C
Advantages
  • low resultant stress induced in final assembly
  • good reliability
  • large fabrication yield
  • low demands on surface topography and roughness
  • simple process technology
  • high bonding strength
  • relatively small seal ring geometries
  • small device feature size possible
Drawbacks
  • different CTE of intermediate layer and wafer material
  • restrictions of widespread connections caused by mechanical stress
  • further technological procedures to prevent oxidation of silicon surface
Researches
  • low melting alloys
  • SLID bonding

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Lin, Y.-C.; Baum M.; Haubold, M.; Fromel J.; Wiemer, M.; Gessner T.; Esashi, M. (2009). "Development and evaluation of AuSi eutectic wafer bonding". Solid-State Sensors, Actuators and Microsystems Conference, 2009. TRANSDUCERS 2009. International. pp. 244–247. doi:10.1109/SENSOR.2009.5285519.
  2. ^ a b Farrens, S.; Sood, S. (2008). "Wafer Level Packaging: Balancing Device Requirements and Materials Properties". . International Microelectronics and Packaging Society. Archived from the original on 2011-09-25. Retrieved 2011-05-15. {{cite conference}}: Unknown parameter |agency= ignored (help)
  3. ^ Venkatasubramanian, Rama (1992). "High Quality Eutectic-Metal-Bonded AlGaAs-GaAs Thin Films on Si Substrates". Appl. Phys. Lett. 60: 886–889.
  4. ^ Venkatasubramanian, Rama (1994). "Optoelectronic Properties of Eutectic-Metal-Bonded (EMB) GaAs-AlGaAs Structures on Si Substrates". Solid State Electronics. 37: 1809–1815.
  5. ^ a b c d G. Gerlach; W. Dötzel (2008). Ronald Pething (ed.). Introduction to Microsystem Technology: A Guide for Students (Wiley Microsystem and Nanotechnology). Wiley Publishing. ISBN 978-0-470-05861-9.
  6. ^ a b c d e R. F. Wolffenbuttel (1997). "Low-temperature intermediate Au-Si wafer bonding; eutectic or silicide bond". Sensors and Actuators A: Physical. 62 (1–3): 680–686. doi:10.1016/S0924-4247(97)01550-1.
  7. ^ Farrens, S. (2008). Latest Metal Technologies for 3D Integration and MEMS Wafer Level Bonding (Report). SUSS MicroTec Inc.
  8. ^ Matijasevic, G.S.; Lee C.C.; Wang, C.Y. (1993). "Au-Sn alloy phase diagram and properties related to its use as a bonding medium". Thin Solid Films. 223 (2): 276–287. doi:10.1016/0040-6090(93)90533-U.
  9. ^ a b Sood, S.; Farrens S.; Pinker, R.; Xie J.; Cataby, W. (2010). "Al-Ge Eutectic Wafer Bonding and Bond Characterization for CMOS Compatible Wafer Packaging". ECS Transactions. Vol. 33. pp. 93–101. doi:10.1149/1.3483497.
  10. ^ a b Lani, S.; Bosseboeuf, A.; Belier, B.; Clerc, C.; Gousset, C.; Aubert, J. (2006). "Gold metallizations for eutectic bonding of silicon wafers". Microsystem Technologies. Vol. 12. pp. 1021–1025. doi:10.1007/s00542-006-0228-6.
  11. ^ M. Wiemer; J. Frömel; T. Gessner (2003). "Trends der Technologieentwicklung im Bereich Waferbonden". In W. Dötzel (ed.). 6. Chemnitzer Fachtagung Mikromechanik & Mikroelektronik. Vol. 6. Technische Universität Chemnitz. pp. 178–188. {{cite conference}}: Unknown parameter |agency= ignored (help)
  12. ^ a b c Farrens, S. (2008). "Wafer-Bonding Technologies and Strategies for 3D ICs. Chapter 4". In Tan, C. S.; Gutmann, R. J.; Reif, L. R. (eds.). Wafer Level 3-D ICs Process Technology. Integrated Circuits and Systems. Springer US. pp. 49–85. doi:10.1007/978-0-387-76534-1.
  13. ^ Schneider, A.; Rank H.; Müller-Fiedler, R.; Wittler O.; Reichl, H. (2009). "Stabilitätsbewertung eutektisch gebondeter Sensorstrukturen auf Waferlevel". In Hermann, G. (ed.). 9. Chemnitzer Fachtagung Mikromechanik & Mikroelektronik. pp. 51–56.
  14. ^ Yost, F. (1974). "Ultimate strength and morphological structure of eutectic bonds". Journal of Electronic Materials. Vol. 3, no. 2. pp. 353–369. doi:10.1007/BF02652947.
  15. ^ Cheng, Y.T.; Lin L.; Najafi, K. (2000). "Localized silicon fusion and eutectic bonding for MEMS fabrication and packaging". Journal of Microelectromechanical Systems. Vol. 9, no. 1. pp. 3–8. doi:10.1109/84.825770.
  16. ^ Kim, J.; Cheng, Y.-T.; Chiao, M.; Lin, L. (2007). "Packaging and Reliability Issues in Micro/Nano Systems". In Bhushan, B. (ed.). Springer Handbook of Nanotechnology. Springer Berlin Heidelberg. pp. 1777–1806. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-29857-1.
  17. ^ a b c d R. F. Wolffenbuttel; K. D. Wise (1994). "Low-temperature silicon wafer-to-wafer bonding using gold at eutectic temperature" (PDF). Sensors and Actuators A: Physical. 43 (1–3): 223–229. doi:10.1016/0924-4247(93)00653-L. hdl:2027.42/31608.

eutectic, bonding, also, referred, eutectic, soldering, describes, wafer, bonding, technique, with, intermediate, metal, layer, that, produce, eutectic, system, those, eutectic, metals, alloys, that, transform, directly, from, solid, liquid, state, vice, versa. Eutectic bonding also referred to as eutectic soldering describes a wafer bonding technique with an intermediate metal layer that can produce a eutectic system Those eutectic metals are alloys that transform directly from solid to liquid state or vice versa from liquid to solid state at a specific composition and temperature without passing a two phase equilibrium i e liquid and solid state The fact that the eutectic temperature can be much lower than the melting temperature of the two or more pure elements can be important in eutectic bonding Ultrasonic image of a blank Au Si eutectic bonded wafer 1 Ultrasonic image of a patterned Au Si eutectic bonded wafer 1 Eutectic alloys are deposited by sputtering dual source evaporation or electroplating They can also be formed by diffusion reactions of pure materials and subsequently melting of the eutectic composition 2 Eutectic bonding to transfer epitaxial materials such as GaAs AlGaAs onto Si substrates with a high degree of success for the general purpose of optoelectronics integration with Si electronics as well as to overcome fundamental issues such as lattice mismatch in hetero epitaxy was developed and reported by Venkatasubramanian et al in 1992 3 The device performance validation of such eutectic metal bonded GaAs AlGaAs materials for solar cells were further reported by Venkatasubramanian et al in 1994 4 Eutectic bonding is able to produce hermetically sealed packages and electrical interconnection within a single process compare ultrasonic images In addition this procedure is conducting at low processing temperatures low resultant stress induced in final assembly high bonding strength large fabrication yield and a good reliability Those attributes are dependent on the coefficient of thermal expansion between the substrates 1 The most important parameters for eutectic bonding are bonding temperature bonding duration tool pressureContents 1 Overview 2 Procedural steps 2 1 Pre treatment 2 2 Bonding process 2 3 Cooling process 3 Examples 4 Technical specifications 5 ReferencesOverview editEutectic bonding is based on the ability of silicon Si to alloy with numerous metals and form a eutectic system The most established eutectic formations are Si with gold Au or with aluminium Al 5 This bonding procedure is most commonly used for Si or glass wafers that are coated with an Au Al film and partly with adhesive layer compare with following image nbsp Bonding of Si wafer to l glass or r silicon wafer coated with Au or Al layer 5 The Si Au couple has the advantages of an exceptionally low eutectic temperature an already widespread use in die bonding and the compatibility with Al interconnects 6 Additionally often used eutectic alloys for wafer bonding in semiconductor fabrication are shown in the table Choosing the correct alloy is determined by the processing temperature and compatibility of the materials used 7 Commonly used eutectic alloys Eutectic alloy Eutectic composition Eutectic temperatureAu In 0 6 99 4 wt 156 CCu Sn 5 95 wt 231 CAu Sn 8 80 20 wt 280 CAu Ge 72 28 wt 361 CAu Si 97 15 2 85 wt 370 CAl Ge 9 49 51 wt 419 CAl Si 87 5 12 5 wt 580 C nbsp Si Au phase diagram 1 Further the bonding has less restrictions concerning substrate roughness and planarity than direct bonding Compared to anodic bonding no high voltages are required that can be detrimental to electrostatic MEMS Additionally the eutectic bonding procedure promotes a better out gassing and hermeticity than bonding with organic intermediate layers 10 Compared to glass frit bonding the advantage sticks out that the reduction of seal ring geometries an increase of the hermeticity levels and a shrinking of device size is possible The geometry of eutectic seals is characterized by a thickness of 1 5 µm and a wideness of gt 50 µm The use of eutectic alloy brings the advantage of providing electrical conduction and interfacing with redistribution layers The temperature of the eutectic bonding procedure is dependent on the used material The bonding happens at a specific weight and temperature e g 370 C at 2 85 wt Si for Au intermediate layer compare to phase diagram 5 The procedure of eutectic bonding is divided into following steps 11 Substrate processing Conditioning prior to bonding e g oxide removal Bonding process Temperature Mechanical Pressure for a few minutes Cooling processProcedural steps editPre treatment edit The surface preparation is the most important step to accomplish a successful eutectic bonding This bonding procedure is due to oxide presence on the silicon substrates very limited based on the poor wettability of Au on the oxide layer This leads to a poor adhesion of the eutectic bond The oxide on the silicon surface acts as a diffusion barrier 6 The surface preparation s main task is to facilitate the deposition of the eutectic metal by oxide removal or adhesion layer deposition 12 To remove existing native oxide layers wet chemical etching HF clean dry chemical etching or chemical vapor deposition CVD with different types of crystals can be used Also some applications require a surface pre treatment using dry oxide removal processes e g H2 plasma and CF4 plasma 1 An additional method for the removal of unwanted surface films i e oxide is applying ultrasound during attachment process 13 As soon the tool is lowered a relative vibration between the wafer and the substrate is applied Commonly industrial bonders use ultrasonic with 60 Hz vibration frequencies and 100 µm vibration amplitude 14 A successful oxide removal results in a solid hermetically tight connection 5 nbsp Scheme of typical wafer composition including an optional layer of Ni Pt A Second method to ensure the eutectic metal adheres on the Si wafer is by using an adhesion layer This thin intermediate metal layer adheres well to the oxide and the eutectic metal Well suitable metals for an Au Si compound are titanium Ti and chromium Cr resulting in e g Si SiO2 Ti Au or Si SiO2 Cr Au The adhesion layer is used to break up the oxide by diffusion of silicon into the used material A typical wafer is composed of a silicon wafer with oxide 30 200 nm Ti or Cr layer and Au layer of gt 500 nm thickness In the wafer fabrication a nickel Ni or a platinum Pt layer is added between the gold and the substrate wafer as diffusion barrier 10 The diffusion barrier avoids interaction between Au and Ti Cr and requires higher temperatures to form a reliable and uniform bond Further the very limited solubility of silicon in titanium and chromium can prevent the developing of Au Si eutectic composition based on the diffusion of silicon through titanium into gold 6 The eutectic materials and optional adhesion layers are usually approached by deposition as alloy in one layer by dual component electroplating dual source evaporation physical vapor deposition or composite alloy sputtering 12 The removal of contamination on the for silicon most established Au layer is usually realized with water flushing and wafer heating 1 Bonding process edit The contacting of the substrates is applied directly after the pre treatment of the surfaces to avoid oxide regeneration The bonding procedure for oxidizing metals not Au generally takes place in a reduced atmosphere of 4 hydrogen and an inert carrier gas flow e g nitrogen The requirements for the bonding equipment lies in the thermal and pressure uniformity across the wafer This enables uniformly compressed seal lines 2 The substrate is aligned and fixed on a heated stage and the silicon wafer in a heated tool The substrates inserted in the bonding chamber are contacted maintaining the alignment As soon the layers are in atomic contact the reaction between those starts To support the reaction mechanical pressure is applied and heating above the eutectic temperature is carried out 1 The diffusivity and solubility of gold into silicon substrate increases with rising bonding temperatures A higher temperature than the eutectic temperature is usually preferred for the bonding procedure This may result in the formation of a thicker Au Si alloy layer and further a stronger eutectic bond 15 The diffusion starts as soon as the layers are in atomic contact at elevated temperatures 1 The contacted surface layer containing the eutectic composites melts forming a liquid phase alloy accelerating further mixing processes and diffusion until the saturation composition is reached 16 17 Other common eutectic bonding alloys commonly used for wafer bonding include Au Sn Al Ge Au Ge Au In and Cu Sn 9 The chosen bonding temperature usually is some degrees higher than the eutectic temperature so the melt becomes less viscous and readily flows due to higher roughness to surface areas that are not in atomic contact 12 To prevent the melt pressed outside the bonding interface the optimization of the bonding parameter control is necessary e g low force on the wafers Otherwise it may lead to short circuits or device malfunctions of the used components electrical and mechanical 1 The heating of the wafers leads to a change in the surface texture due to formation of fine silicon micro structures on top of the gold surface 17 Cooling process edit nbsp Cross section SEM image of the bonding interface between Si and Au with 80 3 Si atom percentage 1 The material mix is solidified when the temperature decreases below eutectic point or the concentration ratio changes for Si Au T lt 370 C 1 The solidification leads to epitaxial growth of silicon and gold on top of the silicon substrate resulting in numerous small silicon islands protruding from a polycrystalline gold alloy compare to cross section image of the bonding interface 6 This can result in bonding strengths around 70 MPa The importance lies in the appropriate process parameters i e sufficient bonding temperature control 17 Otherwise the bond cracks due to stress caused by a mismatch of the thermal expansion coefficient This stress is able to relax over time 6 Examples editBased on the high bonding strength this procedure is special applicable for pressure sensors or fluidics Also smart micro mechanical sensors and actuators with electronic and or micro mechanical functions over multiple wafers can be fabricated 17 Technical specifications editMaterials Substrate Si Si Si glass w adhesive layerIntermediate layer Au AgTemperature Au 375 C Al 570 CAdvantages low resultant stress induced in final assembly good reliability large fabrication yield low demands on surface topography and roughness simple process technology high bonding strength relatively small seal ring geometries small device feature size possibleDrawbacks different CTE of intermediate layer and wafer material restrictions of widespread connections caused by mechanical stress further technological procedures to prevent oxidation of silicon surfaceResearches low melting alloys SLID bondingReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k Lin Y C Baum M Haubold M Fromel J Wiemer M Gessner T Esashi M 2009 Development and evaluation of AuSi eutectic wafer bonding Solid State Sensors Actuators and Microsystems Conference 2009 TRANSDUCERS 2009 International pp 244 247 doi 10 1109 SENSOR 2009 5285519 a b Farrens S Sood S 2008 Wafer Level Packaging Balancing Device Requirements and Materials Properties IMAPS International Microelectronics and Packaging Society Archived from the original on 2011 09 25 Retrieved 2011 05 15 a href Template Cite conference html title Template Cite conference cite conference a Unknown parameter agency ignored help Venkatasubramanian Rama 1992 High Quality Eutectic Metal Bonded AlGaAs GaAs Thin Films on Si Substrates Appl Phys Lett 60 886 889 Venkatasubramanian Rama 1994 Optoelectronic Properties of Eutectic Metal Bonded EMB GaAs AlGaAs Structures on Si Substrates Solid State Electronics 37 1809 1815 a b c d G Gerlach W Dotzel 2008 Ronald Pething ed Introduction to Microsystem Technology A Guide for Students Wiley Microsystem and Nanotechnology Wiley Publishing ISBN 978 0 470 05861 9 a b c d e R F Wolffenbuttel 1997 Low temperature intermediate Au Si wafer bonding eutectic or silicide bond Sensors and Actuators A Physical 62 1 3 680 686 doi 10 1016 S0924 4247 97 01550 1 Farrens S 2008 Latest Metal Technologies for 3D Integration and MEMS Wafer Level Bonding Report SUSS MicroTec Inc Matijasevic G S Lee C C Wang C Y 1993 Au Sn alloy phase diagram and properties related to its use as a bonding medium Thin Solid Films 223 2 276 287 doi 10 1016 0040 6090 93 90533 U a b Sood S Farrens S Pinker R Xie J Cataby W 2010 Al Ge Eutectic Wafer Bonding and Bond Characterization for CMOS Compatible Wafer Packaging ECS Transactions Vol 33 pp 93 101 doi 10 1149 1 3483497 a b Lani S Bosseboeuf A Belier B Clerc C Gousset C Aubert J 2006 Gold metallizations for eutectic bonding of silicon wafers Microsystem Technologies Vol 12 pp 1021 1025 doi 10 1007 s00542 006 0228 6 M Wiemer J Fromel T Gessner 2003 Trends der Technologieentwicklung im Bereich Waferbonden In W Dotzel ed 6 Chemnitzer Fachtagung Mikromechanik amp Mikroelektronik Vol 6 Technische Universitat Chemnitz pp 178 188 a href Template Cite conference html title Template Cite conference cite conference a Unknown parameter agency ignored help a b c Farrens S 2008 Wafer Bonding Technologies and Strategies for 3D ICs Chapter 4 In Tan C S Gutmann R J Reif L R eds Wafer Level 3 D ICs Process Technology Integrated Circuits and Systems Springer US pp 49 85 doi 10 1007 978 0 387 76534 1 Schneider A Rank H Muller Fiedler R Wittler O Reichl H 2009 Stabilitatsbewertung eutektisch gebondeter Sensorstrukturen auf Waferlevel In Hermann G ed 9 Chemnitzer Fachtagung Mikromechanik amp Mikroelektronik pp 51 56 Yost F 1974 Ultimate strength and morphological structure of eutectic bonds Journal of Electronic Materials Vol 3 no 2 pp 353 369 doi 10 1007 BF02652947 Cheng Y T Lin L Najafi K 2000 Localized silicon fusion and eutectic bonding for MEMS fabrication and packaging Journal of Microelectromechanical Systems Vol 9 no 1 pp 3 8 doi 10 1109 84 825770 Kim J Cheng Y T Chiao M Lin L 2007 Packaging and Reliability Issues in Micro Nano Systems In Bhushan B ed Springer Handbook of Nanotechnology Springer Berlin Heidelberg pp 1777 1806 doi 10 1007 978 3 540 29857 1 a b c d R F Wolffenbuttel K D Wise 1994 Low temperature silicon wafer to wafer bonding using gold at eutectic temperature PDF Sensors and Actuators A Physical 43 1 3 223 229 doi 10 1016 0924 4247 93 00653 L hdl 2027 42 31608 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eutectic bonding amp oldid 1039814235, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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