Development of conducting adhesive materials for microelectronic applications
Abstract
Electrically and/or thermally conducting adhesive materials are classified into two categories depending on their conduction modes: isotropic and anisotropic materials. Silver-particle filled epoxy is the most common example of the class of isotropic materials which are conductive in all directions. This material has been long used in the electronic applications as a die-bonding material, where its good thermal conduction rather than its electrical conduction property is utilized. The silver-filled epoxy material has several limitations for high performance electrical interconnections, such as low electrical conductivity, increase in contact resistance during thermal exposure, low joint strength, corrosion issue due to silver migration, difficulty in rework, and so forth. The anisotropic conducting material provides electrical and/or thermal conduction only in one direction. An anisotropic conducting film (ACF) is used for interconnecting TAB mounted chips to a liquid crystal display panel, where fine pitch interconnection and low temperature assembly are required. In this paper, a brief review of the state-of-art conducting adhesive technology is provided. Subsequently, development of new conducting adhesive materials is presented for several different applications, which include high temperature materials for ceramic substrates, and low temperature materials for organic substrates.