Microsystem Packaging Ch 3 - Department of Electrical, Computer
Download
Report
Transcript Microsystem Packaging Ch 3 - Department of Electrical, Computer
Fundamentals of Microsystem
Packaging
Presented by:
Paul Kasemir
Ideen Taeb
Chapter 3 Role of Packaging in
Microsystems
What is an Electronic Product?
Examples
1. Computer
2. Telecommunication
3. Automotive
4. Medical and Consumer
Anatomy of a Microsystem
Systems Packaging
PWB/PCB
Physical
Analog
Digital
RF
Photonic ICs
MEMS
Microsystem Classification
There are 6 categories
Automotive
Computer and
Business
Communications
Consumer
Industrial and Medical
Military and Aerospace
4.8%
38.6%
26.1%
11.3%
10.6%
8.7%
Components of a Cell Phone
Computers and the Internet
Computers are the backbone of the
Internet
E-business
Server farms handle e-business information
Streamline internal business and engineering
Employee communications
External relationships
Evolution of Computers
1st Computer: The Eniac 18K vacuum tubes
Von Neumann’s Architecture 1945
Presents basic digital stored-program computer
Unix in the late 1960s
DOS in 1981
Windows 3.1 in 1994
Windows 95/98/NT
Networked Computers
Client-Server networks
Simple low cost clients
Potential high speed computer networks
Remotely “booted”
Example Uses
Customer support
Finance
Manufacturing
Role of Packaging in Computers
Migrate from vacuum tubes to transistors
and finally to integrated circuits (ICs)
Bandwidth is the most important
parameter in computing
Frequency times parallel operations equals
computing power
More computing power means more heat
produced, and needs packaging to cool
How Do Computers Work?
Microprocessor (uP) computes data
I/O subsystem feeds instructions and data
to the microprocessor
Computer System Performance
Performance is measured in MIPS
(Millions of Instructions Per Second)
Component of performance:
Microprocessor speed
Instructions per cycle (MIPS/MHz)
Microprocessor utilization
Perf = (Speed) (MIPS/MHz) (Utilization)
Bandwidth and Performance
Bandwidth measured in bits per second b/s
A 64 bit wide bus at 100MHz clock (using both
up and down edges) has 12.8 Gb/s
Memory that uses both edges is termed doubledata-rate DDR
Bus Bandwidth affects cache fill rate
Latency is also critical
Too many requests to memory will introduce many
wait cycles
Packaging and Performance
Packaging enables good bus performance
Wide busses
Put L2 cache on chip
Packaging is crucial for cooling the uP
Copper heat sinks and heat pipes
Packaging and Bus Design
High via and wire densities
High dielectric constants
High propagation speeds
Low capacitance
Thin layers and many power planes
Lower noise
Good power distribution
Example
Intel’s IA-64 Itanium
Multiple caches
Efficient Heat Sink
Role of Packaging in
Telecommunications
Communications have become much
more complex recently
Used to have different media for different
types of communication
Voice on the phone line
Images on the TV
Data on computers
Multimedia
Combination of multiple types of content into the
same message format
Content has different requirements
Voice needs low delay
Data needs perfect accuracy
Packet switching technology guarantees quality
of service
Fiber optical cable provide high bandwidth for
multimedia communications
Mobile Phones
Market is increasing very fast
Wireless Communications
Bandwidth for wireless is much smaller
Mobile phone sizes are shrinking
1985: 1000g
1990: 350g
Cell Phones
Required components for the phone
Radio frequency/intermediate frequency
(RF/IF)
Analog-to-digital (A/D) and digital-to-analog
(D/A) converters
Digital signal processing hardware
Power and battery management
Transmit/Receive Chain
Baseband Section
CMOS technology used in DSPs
Can reduce the number of ICs
Can reduce the weight and size with
system-on-package (SOP)
RF Section
Uses many materials such as silicon,
silicon germanium or gallium arsenide
CMOS and bipolar technology
100s of passive components for filters and
oscillators
These make size reduction in the RF
components difficult
Battery and Weight
Long battery life is important
Monitor the health of battery
Charge when plugged in
Power digital and analog circuits of battery
Weight is reduced by shrinking the PCB
size and lowering the IC count
Surface Mount Devices (SMD) lower
power, weight and size
Role of Packaging in Automotive
Systems
Automotive industry is as big as electronic
industry.
It accounts for less than 5% of total
equipment sales.
Growing in size every year
Electronic Content
In year 1998, each vehicle had $843 worth
of electronics.
Wires and connectors and buses plays a
major role in Automotive electronics
Wiring and connectors account for 49% of
the average North American electronic
today
In ten years, it will only drop to 44%
Electronics in Automobile
Primary Characteristic of
Automotive is Harsh Environment
Temperature plays a big role in Automotive Industry
For example, under the hood temperature can be as low as -40 deg
C.
And right after starting the car, it can get as high as 204 deg C
This harsh temp environment is combined with humidity, vibration
and etc.
Engine Compartment Thermal
Profile
Electronic Packaging
Technologies
Three Different Technology
Substrate Technologies
Assembly Technologies
System-Level Packaging Technologies
IC and System Substrate
Technologies
Three different substrates are used in
automotive electronics:
Organic,
Ceramic
and insulated metal
Organic Packaging
Technologies(FR-4)
Most widely used substrate
Includes many layers
Substrates with higher glass are emerging for
higher temperature and communication-related
automotive applications
New generation with caps and resistors
embedded in the layers thus avoiding discrete
components
Ceramic Packaging Technologies
Alumina is most commonly used ceramic
Laser trimmability of the thick film resistors
to obtain precision values is an attractive
feature of this technology.
Other examples are: HTCC, LTCC
In those, embedded passives are also
available
Aluminum nitride used for thermal
management
Ceramic Packaging in
Automotives
Metal Packaging Technologies
Insulated with a dielectric layer on which
the circuitry is built.
More advantages in thermal management,
and geometric
Assembly
System-Level Packaging
Technologies
Two different methods:
Housing Techniques
Passivation/Conformal Coating
Housing Technique
Includes die-cast aluminum, die-cast
plastic and sheet metal.
Wire-bonding and direct-solder-attach are
used to provide interconnection from the
circuit to substrate
Passivation/Conformal Coating
Can be done at substrate or at final
assembly
Materials used: acrylics, epoxies,
urethanes, silicones and parylenes
Implantable Electromedical
Devices
Widely used today: hearing aids, heart
pacemakers …
Developing in neurological: IPGs can used
to stimulate the spinal cord or the brain
directly to alleviate chronic pain.
Need to be reliable!!!!
Decreasing in size: ICDs from 120cc to
30cc
Implantable Cardiac Defibrillator
Microsystem Play a Dominant
Role in Medical Electronics
Simple cardiac device can function:
Sensing the heart’s electrical activity
Sensing the motions and activity level of the patient
Sensing the blood flow to and from the heart and etc
These functions require low-voltage microprocessors,AD
and AD converters and more functioning blocks
Packaging will put all these in small chip or device.
Role of Packaging in Consumer
Electronics
US Consumer Electronic
Products and Volumes
Characteristics of Consumer
Products
Production is in the millions of units per year
Product life cycles are often short and production ramp
ups are fast
Designs tend to be stable during the product run
Product categories tend to saturate their available
market very quickly, so the industry is always looking for
the next application
Brutal and sustained cost reduction, favoring the oldest
technology that will do the jobs unless the small factor is
critical
Role of Packaging in Micro-Electromechanical
systems(MEMS) products
What are MEMS?
Benefits of MEMS
MEMS play a major role in Medical
Electronics
MEMS applications
What are MEMS?
Key to further development of the industrial,
medical, and control industry.
Combines electrical functions and the
micromachined elements to form a system-onchip(SOC) or system-on-package(SOP)
Compromised of microprocessor circuitry and
mechanical functions
Can be mass produced
Benefits of MEMS
Can be used in nearly every industry
Have a beneficial cost, size and reliability
MEMS play a major role in
Medical Electronics
20 million microscopic pressure sensors
are used each year in blood pressure
measurement
Many different applications such as
micropumps
MEMS Applications
Used in measurement of gravity to determine
orientation tilt and inclination
Measurement of velocity and position
Measurement of vibration and shock
Automobile industry: braking systems,
accelerometer
MEMS market currently in excess of $5 billion
Summary and Future Trends
Summary and Future Trends
Digital performance of the order of 10 GHz
digital computer clock speed
RF performance of the order of 100 GHz
RF/wireless speed
Optical performance of the order of 10
terabit per second
Summary and Future Trends
IC I/Os to be packaged in Various Systems