Silicon-hybrid wafer-scale integration achieved with multilevel aluminum interconnects

A silicon-hybrid wafer-scale integration (WSI) technique has been developed to interconnect complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) circuits. Electrical performance tests and processing diagnostics reveal that the interconnect design is very promising. The wafer-scale integrated circuit was fabricated by mounting two CMOS integrated circuit dies into etched wells and then planarizing the surface of the silicon wafer substrate. Next the wafer's surface was coated with a photosensitive polyimide and patterned with vias to accommodate the interconnecting conductors. The CMOS dies were two-bit shift registers and were electrically interconnected with aluminum conductors using conventional silicon processing techniques. A diagnostic evaluation was accomplished to determine the electrical continuity of the conductors and via contacts. When compared to a complementary wire-bonded interconnect scheme, the silicon WSI technology was found to be the superior performer at 1-MHz operating frequencies. Discontinuous interconnects were evaluated and the failures were identified to occur at the severe topographical steps encountered on the substrate wafer's surface.<<ETX>>