March 1998 - ChipScale Review

March 1998


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Unique Molding System Design Offers Superior Device Encapsulation

The development of an advanced liquid molding machine and a complimentary encapsulant improve significantly on the decades-old process of transfer molding.

By Dr. Daniel Wong, Kras Asia Ltd., Hong Kong, Lawrence L. Plummer, Kras Corp., Fairless Hills, Pennsylvania, and Masaki Kitaoka and Masa Yanagi, Nippon Pelnox, Kanagawa, Japan A new, fully-automated liquid molding machine, the KALMS (Kras Automatic Liquid Molding System), has

been developed which employs the concept of stationary modules with moving molds. In addition to offering

higher throughput than traditional transfer molding systems, KALMS (Figure 1 ) eliminates many of the problems connected with older molding equipment.


Figure 1 - Stationary modules with moving molds can also be used in a linear layout with even geater flexibility, ast shown.

Concurrent with the development of the KALMS, a project to develop a new encapsulant resulted in a material for use with the KALMS that does not require mixing before molding, offers high stability below 120 °C, low viscosity at room temperature, long pot life and no required post-cure.

This paper discusses the design and development of the machine and the encapsulant and traces the history of earlier molding processes.

History

The encapsulation of electrical and electronic components with a variety of plastics has been a common process for more than fifty years. The early electronics industry employed encapsulation for device protection from the elements, electrical insulation and to provide an identifying shape. Components such as resistors and capacitors were subjected to the high pressures of compression molding with materials such as phenolics and putty-like alkyds.

Soon after the historic invention of the transistor by Bell Laboratories, the need to package an axial-lead diode, specifically a varistor, surfaced. Initial attempts to compression mold the device with alkyd resulted in severe damage to the delicate semiconductor.

Background

The first epoxy molding compound was developed almost simultaneously with the encapsulation requirements of Bell Labs. Prior to the introduction of B-staged epoxy, this material was applied as a liquid by casting and potting using a variety of small cases and shells. This was, at best, a slow and messy process, not suited to axial-leaded products. Soon after, Bell Labs, in partnership with two other companies-one a supplier of molds, the other a supplier of resins-invented a process for transfer molding semiconductors using epoxy resins.

Today, almost 35 years later, a partnership between Kras Asia, an equipment and tooling manufacturer; Nippon Pelnox, a Japanese resin formulator; and General Semi (Formerly General Instrument) has pioneered a major breakthrough in the encapsulation process.

Epoxies, today possess outstanding properties. Automatic machines that cost over $1 million each are lined up in factories producing epoxy-encapsulated components. However, the process today remains almost identical to the first trials decades ago where an axial-leaded varistor was molded for Bell Labs by transfer molding.

Current epoxy resins are formulated like a cake mix with resin, hardener, filler pigments and release agents all blended together. The resulting formulation has built-in stability which enables the compound to be shipped and stored without significant degradation.

The resin, in a granular form or compacted into a more easily-handled pill or preform, awaits the heat and pressure of the transfer molding process to turn it into a liquid. When this takes place, the liquid epoxy flows into and around the device to be encapsulated via a series of gates and runners. Once heated, the polymerization (hardening) begins and is completed. Today's fast-cure materials, which use the new multiplunger or gangpot molding designs, are capable of curing in less than a minute.

In an age where almost all the costs to produce semiconductors are declining, epoxy resins continue on an unbroken upward price spiral.

Even with the advances in mold design to reduce waste left in the runner, cull and gates, waste is still a costly concern as are the environmental issues concerned with waste disposal.

Over the years, many attempts have been made to eliminate the preformulated cake mix concept of "one mix fits all."While resin systems have improved substantially from a quality and stability standpoint, shipping into the warm, humid manufacturing areas of southeast Asia continues to be a concern.

The process of metering liquid epoxy resin and hardener, then having to thoroughly mix these materials before dispensing or injecting into a mold was difficult and provided little success for component encapsulation. The problems of handling and cleaning the rapidly reacting and hardening epoxy was difficult and could be disastrous if the material froze in the transport mechanism.

Encapsulation-grade polyester, supplied as a liquid, was a process tried for awhile. The resin could be supplied

thoroughly mixed in a liquid form. It remained unreactive until it entered the molding area where a specific temperature triggered the reaction and cure. The liquid polyester was transferred from a storage vessel via a plunger or screw for each shot. The process worked, after a fashion, but unfortunately the polyester resin could not compete with the performance characteristics of epoxy.

Costs and improved performance continue to drive developments in the electronic components industry. The industry wants servo-driven, fully-automatic equipment and shorter cycle times, increased yields, higher quality molding compounds and reduced molding compound consumption and waste.

For several years, Kras Asia has been involved in a partnership to develop a system to meet the expanding needs of this market.

General Semi, formerly the diode operation of General Instrument, is the world's largest producer of silicon rectifiers. General Semi wanted a process that offered fully automatic encapsulation, shorter cycle times, improved device performance, less material usage and a process where no molding compound came in contact with the axial leads. Keeping the molding compound away from the leads prevents a problem that has always plagued components-flash. Certain abilities of the system-KALMS and the encapsulant were determined to be necessary, as shown in Table 1.

Nippon Pelnox contribution to the partnership was the development of its patented epoxy formulation (U.S. patent # 5,610,443).

Even before the first designs of the machine and tooling were programmed on CAD, we had to determine if the liquid molding compound met and exceeded the quality levels of the state-of-the-art molding compounds then used by General Semi. After thousands of hours of tests, the material passed and exceeded performance expectations.

Table 1 - Encapsulant and molding equipment requirements.
A preformulated material that would not freeze in the transport or nozzle
The ability to control the exact amount of material for each shot
Exact control of the two-stage injection pressure
Stability of the mixed resin
A fail-safe method for cleaning nozzles and mold

The next step was to design a test system to see if the material could be handled in a way that overcame the previous problems of liquid molding. In the patented formulation of Nippon Pelnox's epoxy, ELM- 1000, the hardener is a solid and is not desolved in the epoxy resin at ambient temperature, which enables the mixture to be formulated, transported and stored without reacting, except where and when required. The new resin offered a complete set of properties, before curing (Table 2) and after curing (Table 3).

Kras, as a major provider of encapsulation systems for over 38 years, understands the design and manufacture of machines, molds and component handling. New to this project, however, was the requirement to reduce material consumption substantially and to provide a means of dispensing the liquid resin without the molding compound touching the lead wires.

Concept Avoids Flash Deposits

To avoid flash, Kras developed a key concept called "The Capillary Gate Passage." (Figure 2). In this design, a series of small, needle-like nozzles enter the mold from the top and are positioned between the leads of two components. The nozzles clamp on the parting line of the mold. The capillary nozzles carry the exact amount of resin needed to encapsulate the two diodes. Unlike the runners and gates in conventional molds, the passage has a uniform profile and cross-sectional area which is the same size as the gate tip in a conventional mold. This unique design keeps the resin from contacting the leads while also using substantially less compound.

This capillary concept provides increased heat and rapid curing, as the material with reduced viscosity enters and gently surrounds the device being encapsulated. Once the resin has cleared the capillary nozzle, the nozzles retract leaving a cull 1 mm thick by 2 mm in diameter. The filled mold leaves the injection station immediately, to be automatically replaced by another mold.

Properties Test Conditions Unit ELM-1000 Liquid Resin
Specific Gravity 25°C
1.95
Viscosity 25°C, No. 7, 2 rpm Poise 1000
25°C, No. 7, 20 rpm Poise 544
Gelation Time 150°C, 50 mg Sec. 40
150°C, 1.5 mg Sec. 65
180°C, 50 mg Sec. 4
180°C, 1.5 mg Sec. 18

Table 3 - Properties of ELM-1000 resin after curing.
Properties
after Curing
Test Conditions Unit ELM-1000 Cured Resin
150°C
1 hour
150°C
30 min
Hardness ASTM D-2240, Shore D 93 93
HDT ASTM D-648 °C >=200 >=200
Tg TMA °C 170 180
CTE >=Tg, a2 PPM/°C 20 20
Flexural
Strength
JIS K-6911, 25°C kgf/mm2 10.2 10.5
Flexural
Modulus
JIS K-6911, 25°C kgf/mm2 1270 1220
Lap Share
Adhesion
Strength
JIS K-6850, Cu/Cu kgf/mm2 220 233
Volume
Resistivity
JIS K-6911, 25°C .cm 2.8x1016 2.8x1016
24 hrs boiling .cm 1.1x1014 1.3x1014
24 hrs PCT .cm 1.5x1013 1.7x10 13
Water
Absorption
JIS K-6911
24 hrs boiling
wt.% 0.67 0.60
24 hrs PCT wt.% 0.93 0.89
Fire
Retardant
UL-94
V-0 V-0
Impurities K+, Cl- PPM <=10 <=10

The New Encapsulation System

The KALMS is a servo-driven rotary machine which consists of eight individual diode molds. Each mold contains three chases of 40 cavities.

The cycle begins at station one where an automatic loader accurately positions 120 diodes onto mold Number 1. This loading continues as each empty mold moves into position.

Mold Number 1 is clamped in two stages: pre-clamp and power clamp. At the pre-clamp stage, four tons of clamping force is generated by actuators which move with the mold, keeping it closed. At the injection or molding station, a total force of 17 tons of clamping force is applied by a servo-actuator. After molding, the mold continues through the other stations with the pre-clamp tonnage.

The KALMS uses a multiple nozzle system. Each nozzle has a core (inner) plunger running through the center of the sleeve (outer) plunger. The sleeve plunger meters each shot via a reciprocal motion inside the nozzle case. Molding compound is injected using two controlled pressures. One advances the material into the cavity; the second produces a final, higher pressure pack.

The entire injection module is powered by two independent servo motors. These motors control movement for nozzle downward engagement, compound metering, injection, sealing and nozzle retraction.

To insure a reliable injection operation, a dedicated automatic nozzle cleaner is incorporated into the system. With self-cleaning features, the auto nozzle cleaner removes any residual compound remaining on the core plunger and the nozzle tip. As soon as the nozzles disengage from the mold, the nozzle cleaner engages the injection module.

After the first mold has been injected with compound, it moves through curing stations 3, 4 and 5. At station 6, the mold is opened and all 120 encapsulated diodes are automatically removed. A special ejector mechanism ensures that all culls have also been removed.

The empty mold then moves to station 7, where it is thoroughly cleaned with air, vacuum and rotary brushes. The cleaned empty mold moves to station 8 where the reloading of 120 diodes is completed automatically. The entire molding


Figure 2-The KALMS employs a concept called "The Capillary Gate Passage." This passage connects mold cavities to a point where compound is supplied from outside the mold.

Table 4-Reliability test results for ELM-1000 resin without postcuring.
Test Conditions Duration Failure Rate
O.P.Life 100V/1A/75% ~1000 hrs 0/20
HTRB 1000V/150°C ~1000 hrs 0/50
Storage 175 °C ~1000 hrs 0/20
Humidity Bias 600V/85°C/ 85%RH ~1000 hrs 0/85
Humidity 65°C/90~95%RH ~1000 hrs 0/20
Moisture 65°C/-10°C/ 90-98%RH ~960 hrs 0/20
PCT 15P/121°C ~288 hrs 0/50
Temp. Cycle 150°C/-55°C/30 min ~1000 cyc 0/50
Thermal Shock 0/100°C ~100 cyc 0/50
Power Cycle 1A/4 min ~1000 cyc 0/50
Forward Surge 1000V/1A 30A 0/20
cycle can take less than one minute and can produce over 51,000 parts in one hour with 95% molding compound utilization. Additionally, the ELM- 1000 resin scores high in reliability, as the preliminary results in Table 4 show.

Conclusion

Future generations of the machine can be configured as inline systems, if desired, and the types of components, especially high-leadcount semiconductors, can materially benefit by the advances available from this process and the advanced molding material. Additionally, the developers are looking into the possibility of applying the liquid molding technology to reduce the wire sweep of fine pitch IC packages.

Dr. Wong, Kras Asia Ltd., Hong Kong, may be reached at 852.2344.4141, fax 852.2343.4819. Mr. Plummer, Chairman/ CEO of Kras Corp., Fairless Hill, PA, he may be contacted at 215.736.0981,fax215.736.8953. Contact Mr. Yanagaio Mr. Kitaoka at Nippon Peluox, Kanagawa, Japan, at 81.0465.74.1211, fax 81.0465.71.7944.

(This article was originally presented in a different form at APCON '97 and is used by permission.)



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