Paper
15 July 2004 Laser dicing of silicon and composite semiconductor materials
Ochelio Sibailly, Bernold Richerzhagen
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Abstract
Dicing of semiconductor wafers is an example of an application requiring a processing quality superior to what can be achieved using classical laser techniques. For this reason, sawing the wafers with a diamond-edged blade has been developed into a high-tech process, that guarantees good and reliable cuts for Silicon wafers of more than 300 microns thickness. Today, wafer thickness is getting thinner; down to 50 microns and also more brittle III-V compound semiconductors are used more frequently. On these thin wafers; the laser begins again to compete with the diamond saw, because of laser cutting-quality and cutting-speed, are increasing with decreasing wafer thickness. Conventional laser cutting however has the disadvantages of debris deposition on the wafer surface, weak chip fracture strength because of heat induced micro cracks. An elegant way to overcome these problems is to opt for the water-jet guided laser technology. In this technique the laser is conducted to the work piece by total internal reflection in a 'hair-thin' stable water-jet, comparable to an optical fiber. The water jet guided laser technique was developed originally in order to reduce the heat affected zone near the cut, but in fact the absence of beam divergence and the efficient melt xpulsion are also important advantages. In this presentation we will give an overview on today’s state of the art in dicing thin wafers, especially compound semiconductor wafers, using the water-jet guided laser technology.
© (2004) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Ochelio Sibailly and Bernold Richerzhagen "Laser dicing of silicon and composite semiconductor materials", Proc. SPIE 5339, Photon Processing in Microelectronics and Photonics III, (15 July 2004); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.529038
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CITATIONS
Cited by 8 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Semiconducting wafers

Laser cutting

Semiconductor lasers

Silicon

Gallium arsenide

Abrasives

Compound semiconductors

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