Review of percolating and neck-based underfills with thermal conductivities up to 3 W/m-K

Heat dissipation from 3D chip stacks can cause large thermal gradients due to the accumulation of dissipated heat and thermal interfaces from each integrated die. To reduce the overall thermal resistance and thereby the thermal gradients, this publication will provide an overview of several studies on the formation of sequential thermal underfills that result in percolation and quasi-areal thermal contacts between the filler particles in the composite material. The quasi-areal contacts are formed from nanoparticles self-assembled by capillary bridging, so-called necks. Thermal conductivities of up to 2.5 W/m-K and 2.8 W/m-K were demonstrated experimentally for the percolating and the neck-based underfills, respectively. This is a substantial improvement with respect to a state-ofthe-art capillary thermal underfill (0.7 W/m-K). Critical parameters in the formation of sequential thermal underfills will be discussed, such as the material choice and refinement, as well as the characteristics and limitations of the individual process steps. Guidelines are provided on dry vs. wet filling of filler particles, the optimal bi-modal nanosuspension formulation and matrix material feed, and the overpressure cure to mitigate voids in the underfill during backfilling. Finally, the sequential filling process is successfully applied on microprocessor demonstrator modules, without any detectable sign of degradation after 500 thermal cycles. The morphology and performance of the novel underfills are further discussed, ranging from particle arrangements in the filler particle bed, to cracks formed in the necks. The thermal and mechanical performance is benchmarked with respect to the capillary thermal and mechanical underfills. Finally, the thermal improvements within a chip stack are discussed. An 8or 16-die chip stack can dissipate 46% and 65% more power with the optimized neck-based thermal underfill than with a state-of-the-art capillary thermal underfill.

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