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Wirebond Materials, Processes, Reliability and Testing

June 11 - June 13

Wirebond Materials, Processes, Reliability and Testing

Instructor: Lee Levine

Description: Wire Bonding is a welding process that is the dominant chip interconnection method. More than 15 trillion wires are bonded annually. In the past, gold wire was the dominant material in use, but in 2015 copper and palladium coated copper wire captured more than 51% of the total market. Copper provides benefits in cost, improved conductivity, stiffness and reliability. However, it is significantly harder than gold and achieving a robust, reliable process is more challenging.
With the high productivity and growth rate of wire bonding, it is one of the most reliable manufacturing processes. Achieving high yields requires rigorous attention to details and excellent statistical process control. Wire bonding high-volume lead-frames often generates defect rates below 10ppm, this presents a significant barrier to entry for any process competitor, but copper is meeting the challenge in high-volume manufacturing.

This course is intended for wire bond process engineers, technicians, quality control engineers and managers.

The course will cover:

Introduction

  • A snapshot of some microelectronic packages
  • Size of the market
  • Cost of a wire bond

Ultrasonic Welding

  • How ultrasonics effects a materials deformation
  • The principal ultrasonic welding parameters
  • Diffusion

Intermetallics and Intermetallic Failures- Gold and Copper

  • Formation of intermetallic alloys
  • Diffusion transformations during the life and death of a bond

Copper wire bonding

  • Effects of bonding parameters
  • Getting started with copper ball bonding

Wire
Wedge bond vs ball bond parameters and comparison
Ball Bumping

Venue

virtual

Organizer

TJ Green Associates
View Organizer Website