A MEMS Clearinghouse® and information portal
for the MEMS and Nanotechnology community
RegisterSign-In
MEMSnet Home About Us What is MEMS? Beginner's Guide Discussion Groups Advertise Here
News
MEMSnet Home: MEMS-Talk: About Die Bonding
About Die Bonding
2008-03-28
X.P. Zhu
2008-03-28
David Nemeth
2008-03-28
Adamson, Steve
2008-03-28
David Nemeth
2008-03-28
Brad Cantos
About Die Bonding
David Nemeth
2008-03-28
These silver loaded epoxies (such as Epotek H20E) are designed for gold to
gold bonding.  They are optimized for electrical and thermal contact, not
strength, but there shouldn't be any problems.

The two epoxy vendors I mentioned have data on the maximum die size versus
CTE mismatch for each type of epoxy they sell.  It's either on the website
or available from talking to an applications engineer.  Epoxy has a lot more
"give" to it than solder.  If you peruse the options, there are different
epoxies depending on whether you are concerned most with thermal dissipation
or CTE mismatch.

Bonding GaAs chips with gold backsides to gold plated aluminum is an
industry standard process when making microwave assemblies, so I don't think
that will be a problem.

David Nemeth
Senior Engineer

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Adamson, Steve
Sent: Friday, March 28, 2008 11:47 AM
To: General MEMS discussion
Subject: RE: [mems-talk] About Die Bonding

David, I have heard that epoxy does not stick to gold very well. If X.P.
Zhu uses solder I can understand the gold flash. But this may not be the
best backside coating if he uses epoxy. What do you think?

Also he is using copper. That is going to have a huge TCE compared to a
ceramic. Depending on the temperature excursion and his bonding method
he could run into die cracking problems. However I agree with you that
Epoxy is probably his best bet.

reply
Events
Glossary
Materials
Links
MEMS-talk
Terms of Use | Contact Us | Search
MEMS Exchange
MEMS Industry Group
Coventor
Harrick Plasma
Tanner EDA
Tanner EDA by Mentor Graphics
Nano-Master, Inc.
University Wafer
MEMS Technology Review