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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. An electrical contact bump formed on an electrode pad formed on a
substrate, comprising:
a first raised portion made of an electrically conductive material and
attached to the electrode pad; and
a second raised portion formed on the first raised portion and having a
cross sectional area in a plane parallel to the surface of the electrode
pad smaller than that of the first raised portion in a plane parallel to
the surface of the electrode pad, said second raised portion being made of
the same electrically conductive material as that of said first raised
portion, and the ratio of a height of said first raised portion to that of
said second raised portion being in a range of 1/2 to 2/1.
2. An electrical contact bump according to claim 1, wherein the ratio of
the sectional area of the first raised portion to that of the second
raised portion is in the range of 3/2 to 5/1.
3. An electrical contact bump according to claim 1, wherein the width of
the first raised portion is in the range of 60 to 120 .mu.m.
4. An electrical contact bump according to claim 1, wherein the the sum of
the height of the first raised portion and that of the second raised
portion is in the range of 30 to 90 .mu.m.
5. An electrical contact bump according to claim 1, wherein the first and
second raised portion as are formed of gold, copper, aluminum or an alloy
containing gold, copper or aluminum as a main component.
6. An electrical contact bump formed on an electrode pad formed on a
substrate, comprising:
a first raised portion attached to the electrode pad; and
a second raised portion formed on the first raised portion and having a
cross sectional area in a plane parallel to the surface of the electrode
pad smaller than that of the first raised portion in a plane parallel to
the surface of the electrode pad, said second raised portion being made of
a conductive wire extended at one end thereof from the first raised
portion, bent in a loop and bonded at the other end thereof to the first
raised portion.
7. An electrical contact bump according to claim 6, wherein the first and
second raised portions are formed of gold, copper, aluminum or an alloy
containing gold, copper or aluminum as a main component.
8. A package comprising:
a first substrate provided with a plurality of conductive terminals;
a second substrate provided with a plurality of electrode pads respectively
at positions corresponding to the conductive terminals of the first
substrate;
a plurality of electric contact bumps formed respectively on the plurality
of electrode pads, and each consisting of a first raised portion made of
an electrically conductive material and attached to the corresponding
electrode pad, and a second raised portion formed on the first raised
portion and being made of the same electrically conductive material as
that of said first raised portion, the area of a section of the second
raised portion in a plane parallel to the surface of the electrode pad
being smaller than the area of a section of the first raised portion
parallel to the section of the second raised portion, and the ratio of a
height of said first raised portion to that of said second raised portion
being in a range of 1/2 to 2/1; and
droplets of a conductive adhesive respectively bonding the electrical
contact bumps and the corresponding conductive terminals of the first
substrate.
9. A package according to claim 8, wherein each droplet of the conductive
adhesive contacts the first raised portion at substantially only a surface
of the first raised portion on which the second raised portion is formed.
10. A package according to claim 8, wherein the conductive adhesive is
flexible.
11. A package according to claim 8, wherein the ratio of the area of a
section of the first raised portion parallel to the surface of the
electrode pad to that of a section of the second raised portion parallel
to the section of the first raised portion is in the range of 3/2 to 5/1.
12. The package according to claim 8 wherein the width of the first raised
portion is in the range of 60 to 120 .mu.m.
13. The package according to claim 8, wherein the sum of the height of the
first raised portion and that of the second raised portion is in the range
of 30 to 90 .mu..
14. The package according to claim 8, wherein the electrical contact bumps
are formed of gold, copper, aluminum or an alloy containing gold, copper
or aluminum as a main component.
15. A package comprising:
a first substrate provided with a plurality of conductive terminals;
a second substrate provided with a plurality of electrode pads respectively
at positions corresponding to the conductive terminals of the first
substrate;
a plurality of electrical contact bumps formed respectively on the
plurality of electrode pads, and each consisting of a first raised portion
attached to the corresponding electrode pad, and a second raised portion
formed on the first raised portion and having a cross sectional area in a
plane parallel to the surface of the electrode pad smaller than that of
the first raised portion in a plane parallel to the surface of the
electrode pad, said second raised portion being made of a conductive wire
extended at one end thereof from the first raised portion, bent in a loop
and bonded at the other end thereof to the first raised portion; and
droplets of a conductive adhesive respectively bonding the electrical
contact bumps and the corresponding conductive terminals of the first
substate.
16. A package according to claim 15, wherein the droplet of the conductive
adhesive contacts the first raised portion at substantially only a surface
of the first raised portion on which the second raised portion is formed.
17. A package according to claim 15, wherein the conductive adhesive is
flexible.
18. A package according to claim 15, wherein the electrical contact bumps
are formed of gold, copper, aluminum or an alloy containing gold, copper
or aluminum as a main component.
19. An electrical contact bump formed on an electrode pad formed on a
substrate, comprising:
a first raised portion attached to the electrode pad; and
a second raised portion formed on the first raised portion and having a
cross sectional area in a plane parallel to the surface of the electrode
pad smaller than that of the first raised portion in a plane parallel to
the surface of the electrode pad, the ratio of a height of said first
raised portion to that of said raised portion being in a range of 1/2 to
2/1.
20. An electrical contact bump according to claim 19, wherein the ratio of
the sectional area of the first raised portion to that of the second
raised portion is in the range of 3/2 to 5/1.
21. An electrical contact bump according to claim 19, wherein the width of
the first raised portion is in the range of 60 to 120 .mu.m.
22. An electrical contact bump according to claim 19, wherein the sum of
the height of the first raised portion and that of the second raised
portion is in the range of 30 to 90 .mu.m.
23. An electrical bump formed on an electrode pad formed on a substrate,
comprising:
a first raised portion attached to the electrode pad; and
a second raised portion formed on the first raised portion and having a
cross sectional area in a plane parallel to the surface of the electrode
pad smaller than that of the first raised portion in a plane parallel to
the surface of the electrode pad, said second raised portion being made of
a conductive wire extended at one end thereof from the first raised
portion, bent in a loop and bonded at the other end thereof to the
electrode pad at a position close to the first raised portion.
24. A package comprising:
a first substrate provided with a plurality of conductive terminals;
a second substrate provided with a plurality of electrode pads respectively
at positions corresponding to the conductive terminals of the first
substrate;
a plurality of electrical contact bumps formed respectively on the
plurality of electrode pads, and each consisting of a first raised portion
attached to the corresponding electrode pad, and a second raised portion
formed on the first raised portion and having a cross sectional area in a
plane parallel to the surface of the electrode pad smaller than that of
the first raised portion in a plane parallel to the surface of the
electrode pad, said second raised portion being made of a conductive wire
extended at one end thereof from the first raised portion, bent in a loop
and bonded at the other end thereof to the corresponding electrode pad at
a position close to the first raised portion; and
droplets of a conductive adhesive respectively bonding the electrical
contact bumps and the corresponding conductive terminals of the first
substrate. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an electrical contact bump for
electrically connecting an electronic microcircuit chip, such as a
semiconductor IC chip, to terminal electrodes on a chip support frame, a
package provided with such electrical contact bumps, and a method of
forming such electrical contact bumps.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Soldering has often been used to connect the contacts of an electronic
microcircuit chip to conductive terminals on a chip support frame.
However, reduction of intervals between the connecting terminals of an
electronic microcircuit resulting from recent miniaturization and an
increase in the number of the connecting terminals of electronic
microcircuits, such as flat package ICs, has made the use of conventional
soldering techniques for such purpose difficult. Furthermore, there is a
tendency to attach bare IC chips directly to electrodes formed on a glass
substrate for the efficient use of a packaging space in electronic desk
calculators, electronic watches or liquid crystal displays, which strongly
desires effective, precise electrical connecting techniques as a
substitute for soldering.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,661,192 discloses a process for electrically bonding a bare
IC chip to electrodes on a chip support frame, in which contact bumps are
formed on the bonding pads of the IC chip, and the contact bumps are
bonded to conductive terminals on a chip support frame by a conductive
adhesive to mount the IC chip directly on the chip support frame.
A process for forming such contact bumps on the input and output electrode
pads of an IC chip employs a known plating technique. Another process for
the same purpose disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,661,192 is a ball bonding
process, in which a metallic contact ball is fixed to an electrode pad of
an IC chip by a wire bonder, and then the metallic wire is cut off at the
neck of the contact ball. A further process disclosed in U.S. Pat. No.
4,442,967 is a ball bonding process, in which a metallic contact ball is
fixed to an electrode pad by a wire bonder, the capillary is then moved
laterally from the center of the metallic contact ball over a distance 1.5
to two times the diameter of the metallic wire, and then the capillary is
lowered to cut off the metallic wire by the lower end of the capillary.
These known ball bonding processes for forming contact bumps are unable to
form contact bumps which a height necessary for transferring a conductive
adhesive to the IC chip, which is necessary for directly mounting an IC
chip on a chip support frame, and in a satisfactorily uniform shape.
Furthermore, since the top of the raised contact is flat, the conductive
adhesive is spread around the raised contact in mounting the IC chip on
the chip support frame which may short-circuit the adjacent terminals, and
hence these known ball bonding processes are not applicable to forming of
contact bumps at very small intervals. On the other hand, the raised
contact forming process employing plating techniques is complex and
requires many processing steps and advanced etching and plating
techniques. Moreover, the height of the raised contact is limited by the
plating accuracy and cost.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide a package
comprising a chip support frame provided with minute conductive terminals,
and an electronic microcircuit provided with input and output terminals
corresponding respectively to the minute conductive terminals of the chip
support frame, in which the chip support frame and the electronic
microcircuit are connected electrically with a high reliability.
It is another object of the present invention to provide an optimum
electrical contact bump having a sufficient height and a shape suitable
for high-density packaging for the foregoing package.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide a method of
forming uniform electrical contact bumps through very simple processes.
An electrical contact bump in accordance with the present invention has a
two-stepped construction consisting of a first raised portion formed on an
electrode pad, and a second raised portion formed on the first raised
portion and having a sectional area smaller than that of the first raised
portion. The two-stepped electrical contact bumps are formed on the input
and output terminal pads of an electronic microcircuit chip, and the
two-stepped electrical contact bumps are bonded respectively to conductive
terminals on a chip support frame with a conductive adhesive. The
conductive adhesive is formed in a film on a top surface of the first
raised portion so as to cover the second raised portion; that is, the
conductive adhesive is not spread substantially around the side surface of
the first raised portion.
The electrical contact bumps thus formed in the two-stepped construction
have a sufficiently large height, which facilitates transferring the
conductive adhesive to the electronic microcircuit chip. In connecting the
electronic microcircuit chip to the chip support frame with the conductive
adhesive, the upper ends of the raised electrical contact bumps are
brought into contact respectively with the conductive terminals of the
chip support frame and the spread of the conductive adhesive is controlled
by the stepped construction of the first raised portions and the second
raised portions.
Preferably, the ratio of the area of a cross section, taken in a plane
parallel to the terminal pad surface, of the second raised portion of the
electrical contact bump to that of the first raised portion of the same is
in the range of 3:2 to 5:1, and the ratio of height of the second raised
portion to the first raised portion is in the range of 1:2 to 2:1. Such
conditions provide high mechanical strength and stability of the
electrical contact bumps and provide a step capable of stably securing the
conductive adhesive in an amount necessary for connecting the electronic
microcircuit chip to the chip support frame. Advantageously, an excellent
bonding effect is achieved when the width of the electrical contact bump
is in the range of 60 to 120 .mu.m and the height of the electrical
contact bump, namely, the sum of the height of the first raised portion
and that of the second raised portion, is in the range of 30 to 90 .mu.m.
It is more preferable to use a flexible conductive adhesive. The use of a
flexible conductive adhesive, in combination with the shape of the
electrical contact bump capable of holding a necessary amount of the
conductive adhesive, enables the electrical contact bumps to be bonded to
the conductive terminals on the chip support frame to be bonded very
securely against mechanical stress. Thus, the present invention provides a
package of a minute, highly reliable connection construction and a high
practical value.
The electrical contact bumps employed in the package in accordance with the
present invention can be formed by a ball bonding apparatus. A conductive
ball is fixed to a terminal pad on a substrate provided with an electrode
pattern with a capillary to form the first raised portion and then the
conductive wire extending from the first raised portion is bent in a loop
to form the second raised portion having the shape of a loop. Thus, the
two-stepped electrical contact bumps meeting the foregoing conditions can
easily and stably be formed. Since the second raised portion projects
continuously from the first raised portion in the shape of a loop, the
second raised portion has a stable strength and is formed in a shape so
that the ratio of the sectional area of the second raised portion to the
first raised portion is appropriate to form a film of the conductive
adhesive.
The aforesaid method of forming the electrical contact bumps forms the
first raised portion and the second raised portion integrally through the
continuous operation of the ball bonding apparatus. Thus, the method is
capable of forming electrical contact bumps having a sufficiently large
height and uniform shape through a simple process, which, practically, is
very advantageous.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a side elevation of an electrical contact bump of a first
embodiment according to the present invention;
FIG. 2 is a sectional view of an electrical contact bump of a second
embodiment according to the present invention;
FIG. 3 is a sectional view of a package of a preferred embodiment according
to the present invention;
FIG. 4 is a sectional view for explaining a manner of transferring a
conductive adhesive to a substrate of a package in a preferred embodiment
according to the present invention;
FIGS. 5(a), 5(b), 5(c), 5(d), 5(e), 5(f) and 5(g) are sectional views
showing different stages of a method of forming an electrical contact bump
of a preferred embodiment according to the present invention;
FIGS. 6, 7(a) and 7(b) are sectional views of electrical contact bumps of
preferred embodiments according to the present invention formed by other
methods of forming an electrical contact bump embodying the present
invention; and
FIG. 8 is a perspective view of a plurality of electrical contact bumps
formed on the substrate of a semiconductor chip by a method of forming an
electrical contact bump of a preferred embodiment according to the present
invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
An electrical contact bump in a first embodiment according to the present
invention will be described with reference to FIG. 1.
Referring to FIG. 1, an electrical contact bump has a first raised portion
7 and a second raised portion 8. The first raised portion 7 is formed, for
example, on the electrode pad 2 on a substrate 1 of a semiconductor IC
chip. The size of the area of the first raised portion 7 in contact with
the electrode pad 2 is the same as or smaller than that of the electrode
pad 2. The width W of the first raised portion 7 is in the range of 60 to
120 .infin.m. The first raised portion 7 is substantially a trapezoid or
rectangle in elevation in a plane perpendicular to the electrode pad 2,
and may be of any suitable shape, such as a circle or a square, in its top
plan view.
The second raised portion 8 of the electrical contact bump is formed on the
first raised portion 7. The sectional area a of the second raised portion
8 in a plane parallel to the upper surface of the electrode pad 2 is
smaller than the sectional area A of the first raised portion 7 in a plane
parallel to the upper surface of the electrode pad 2. The ratio A/a is in
the range of 3/2 to 5/1. The shape and position of the second raised
portion 8 on the first raised portion 7 are optional provided that the
second raised portion 8 is in contact with and projecting upward from the
first raised portion 7. The ratio of the height H of the first raised
portion 7 to the height h of the second raised portion 8, i.e., H/h, is in
the range of 1/2 to 2/1. The first raised portion 7 and the second raised
portion 8 may be formed of gold, copper, aluminum, or an alloy containing
one of those metals as a main component.
An electrical contact bump of a second embodiment according to the present
invention will be described hereinafter with reference to FIG. 2.
Referring to FIG. 2, an electrical contact bump has a first raised portion
7 and a second raised portion 8. The first raised portion 7 is formed, for
example, on an electrode pad on the substrate 1 of a semiconductor IC
chip. The size of the area of the first raised portion 7 in contact with
the electrode pad 2 is the same as or smaller than the size of the
electrode pad 2. The width W of the first raised portion 7 is in the range
of 60 to 120 .mu.m. The first raised portion 7 is substantially a
trapezoid or rectangle in its side elevation in a plane perpendicular to
the electrode pad 2, and may be of any shape in its top plan view.
The second raised portion 8 of the electrical contact bump is a loop of a
conductive wire projecting from the upper end of the first raised portion
7. The sectional area a of the second raised portion 8 in a plane parallel
to the upper surface of the electrode pad 2 is smaller than the sectional
area A of the first raised portion 7 in a plane parallel to the upper
surface of the electrode pad 2, and the ratio A/a is in the range of 3/2
to 5/1. The shape and position of the second raised portion 8 on the first
raised portion 7 are optional provided that the second raised portion 8 is
in contact with and projecting upward from the upper end of the first
raised portion 7. The ratio of the height H of the first raised portion 7
and the height h of the second raised portion 8, i.e., H/h, is in the
range of 1/2 to 2/1. The first raised portion 7 and the second raised
portion 8 may be formed of gold, copper, aluminum, or an alloy containing
one of those metals as a main component.
Because it is formed by bending a conductive wire in a loop, the second
raised portion 8 of the electrical contact bump has a stable mechanical
strength.
A package of a preferred embodiment according to the present invention
employing the electrical contact bump of FIG. 2 will be described
hereinafter with reference to FIGS. 3 and 4.
Referring to FIG. 3, a chip support frame 10 having conductive terminals
11, and a substrate 1 forming, for example, a semiconductor IC chip having
electrode pads 2 are disposed with the electrode pads 2 opposite to the
corresponding conductive terminals 11, respectively.
The second raised portions 8 are enclosed respectively in droplets of a
flexible conductive adhesive 12. In forming the droplets of the conductive
adhesive 12, the conductive adhesive is applied over the surface of a flat
plate 14 in a film having a uniform thickness in the range of 10 to 40
.mu.m as shown in FIG. 4. Then, the semiconductor IC chip is placed on the
plate 14 with the surface of the substrate 1 thereof having the electrical
contact bumps facing the film of the conductive adhesive 12 so that the
second raised portions 8 and the end surfaces of the first raised portions
7 where the second raised portions 7 are joined to the first raised
portions 7 are buried in the film of the conductive adhesive 12. Then the
substrate 1 of the semiconductor IC chip is raised in a direction
perpendicular to the surface of the plate 14 coated with the conductive
adhesive 12. Thus, the conductive adhesive 12 can be applied
simultaneously only to each of the second raised portions 8 of the
electrical contact bumps formed on the substrate 1 of the semiconductor IC
chip to coat each of the second raised portions 8 perfectly and
individually with the conductive adhesive 12. Since the second raised
portions 7 are coated with the conductive adhesive 12 in such manner, the
conductive adhesive will not spread below the first raised portions 7 near
to the electrode pads 2, and hence there is no possibility that the
adjacent electrode pads 2 are short-circuited by the conductive adhesive
12, which enhances the reliability of the connections. Although it was
specified in the foregoing description of the process of coating the
second raised portions 8 with the conductive adhesive 12 that the
thickness of the film of the conductive adhesive 12 is in the range of 10
to 40 .mu.m, the thickness of the film of the conductive adhesive 12 is
dependent on the height of the electrical contact bumps formed on the
electrode pads 2 of the substrate 1 of the semiconductor IC chip, and the
foregoing specification is only an example and not restrictive.
The substrate 1 is placed on the chip support frame 10 with the droplets of
the conductive adhesive 12 in coincidence and in contact respectively with
the corresponding conductive terminals 11 on the chip support frame 10.
In the package employing such two-stepped electrical contact bumps, the
thickness of the film of the conductive adhesive 12 and the spread of the
same are controlled by the electrical contact bumps, and hence the
electrical contact bumps can be provided in a high density. The use of the
flexible conductive adhesive 12 makes the package highly resistant to
stress and enhances the reliability of the package.
A method of forming the electrical contact bumps of FIG. 2 will be
described hereinafter with reference to FIGS. 5(a) to 5(g), 6, 7(a) and
7(b). This method employs a ball bonding apparatus, which is used
generally in this technical field, to form the electrical contact bump. In
this example, the ball bonding apparatus is Model 1419 of Kulicke and
Soffa. However, the ball bonding apparatus is not limited thereto; any
suitable ball bonding apparatus may be employed. In this example, the
electrode pad 2 formed on the surface of the substrate 1 of the
semiconductor IC chip is an aluminum pad of 1 .mu.m in thickness and 100
.mu.m in width. The semiconductor IC chip is a standard MOS IC chip, and
the dimensions of the substrate 1 are 236 mills.times.236 mils.times.20
mils.
Referring first to FIG. 5(a), the substrate 1 is positioned on a heat block
13 heated at 180.degree. C. and is held fixedly in place by vacuum to
preheat the substrate 1. In this example, the temperature of the heat
block is 180.degree. C. for bonding using heat in combination with
ultrasonic vibrations. However, such temperature is not limitative and any
temperature suitable for the bonding process is possible.
Then, as shown in FIG. 5(b), a gold wire 5 of 1 mil in diameter is inserted
in the bore 4 of a standard capillary 3, which is held right above the
electrode pad 2 at a height from the electrode pad 2 so that it will not
touch the electrode pad 2. A ball 6 having a diameter approximately two to
three times the diameter of the gold wire 5 is formed at the free end of
the gold wire 5 by the thermal energy generated by electric discharge.
Although the gold wire 5 employed in this example is a standard gold wire
of 99.99% in purity for ball bonding, the gold wire 5 is not limited
thereto. More preferably, the wire has heat-resistant characteristics such
that coarse grained crystals are formed by recrystallization in a narrow
area of the wire in a portion contiguous with the ball 6 when the wire is
melted by thermal energy.
Then, as shown in FIG. 5(c), the capillary 3 is lowered toward the
electrode pad 2 so as to bring the ball 6 formed at the free end of the
gold wire 5 into fixed contact with the electrode pad 2 to form a first
raised portion 7. The first raised portion 7 of an electrical contact bump
thus formed was 85 .mu.m in diameter and 30 .mu.m in height. This bonding
process is known as a thermosonic bonding process, which is employed
generally in this technical field, in which supersonic vibration and a
pressure are applied simultaneously to the wire while the substrate is
heated.
Then, as shown in FIG. 5(d), the capillary 3 is raised perpendicularly to
the surface of the substrate 1 of the semiconductor IC chip by 5 mils
relative to the gold wire 5 extending from the first portion 7 of the
electrical contact bump. Although the height of the tip of the capillary 3
is 5 mils in this example, the process can be carried out without trouble
when the height is not less than 3 mils.
Then, as shown in FIG. 5(e), the capillary 3 is moved continuously from the
raised position in parallel to the surface of the substrate 1 over 1 to 2
mils, which is referred to as a reverse motion.
After the reverse motion, the capillary 3 is raised vertically again by 100
mils. The distance of this vertical movement of the capillary 3 is
dependent on the shape of a second raised portion 8 and there is no
practical problem when the distance is in the range of 10 to 200 mils.
Then, the capillary 3 is lowered diagonally and oppositely to the
direction of the reverse motion within a circular area of 4 to 6 mils in
radius above the first raised portion 7 to press the gold wire 5 with the
lower end of the capillary 3 onto the first raised portion 7 at a position
near the circumference of the same in a step shown in FIG. 5(f).
Accordingly, it is desirable that the radius of the circle be slightly
smaller than the sum of the radius of the first raised portion of the
electrical contact bump and the radius of the extremity of the capillary 3
in order to form the second raised portion 8 securely. There is no
particular restriction on the path and distance of the sliding movement of
the capillary 3 relative to the gold wire 5 passed through the bore 4
thereof, except that the capillary moves so as to form a loop of the gold
wire 5 and that the capillary 3 does not move in the same path again
within a plane perpendicular to the surface of the substrate 1 of the
semiconductor IC chip.
Then, as shown in FIG. 5(f), the gold wire 5 is pressed against the
periphery of the first raised portion 7 with the lower end of the
capillary 3 to bond the gold wire 5 to the first raised portion 7 by the
same thermosonic bonding process.
Then, as shown in FIG. 5(g), the gold wire 5 is pulled up together with the
capillary 3 to sever the gold wire 5 from the loop at the junction of the
loop and the gold wire 5. Consequently, a second raised portion 8 is
formed on the first raised portion 7.
Although the free end of the loop of the gold wire 5 is bonded to the
periphery of the first raised portion 7 in this example, the free end of
the loop of the gold wire 5 may be bonded to the first raised portion 7 at
a position other than a position on the periphery of the first raised
portion 7. For example, as shown in FIG. 6, the free end of the loop may
be bonded to the electrode pad 2 on which the first raised portion 7 is
formed by further lowering the capillary 3. It is also possible to form
the same electrical contact bumps as those shown in FIGS. 5(g) and 6
through the same ball bonding process on gold bumps 9 formed as base pads
by plating as shown in FIGS. 7(a) and 7(b).
The two-stepped electrical contact bumps thus formed were 85 .mu.m in
diameter and 80 .mu.m in height, namely, the sum H+h of the height H of
the first raised portion 7 and the height h of the second raised portion
8. The height varied between the electrical contact bumps in the range of
1 to 5 .mu.m. When necessary, the variation in height can further be
reduced and the flatness of a plane including the tops of the electrical
contact bumps can further be improved, for example, by pressing a flat and
smooth surface of a plate against the electrical contact bumps in parallel
to the surface of the substrate 1 of the semiconductor IC chip to reduce
the range of variation in height to 0 to 1 .mu.m. Furthermore, the
two-stepped electrical contact bumps can be formed in a desired diameter
and a desired height by properly regulating the diameter of the ball 6
formed at the free end of the gold wire 5 and using a gold wire having an
appropriate diameter according to the shape and purpose of the two-stepped
electrical contact bumps. A metallic wire suitable for ball bonding, such
as a copper wire or an aluminum wire, may be used instead of the gold
wire.
FIG. 8 is a perspective view showing a plurality of electrical contact
bumps each consisting of a first raised portion 7 and a second raised
portion 8, formed on the substrate 1 of a semiconductor IC chip by an
electrical contact bump forming method in a preferred embodiment according
to the present invention. A semiconductor circuit pattern 15 and a
plurality of electrode pads 2 are formed on the substrate 1 of a
semiconductor IC chip, and the plurality of electrical contact bumps are
formed respectively on the electrode pads 2.
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Description  |
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