The cost of packaging in microelectronics accounts for 30 % of total
production costs. However, this is rising at an alarming rate because of
increasing consumer demand for smaller and smarter portable electronic
devices. Technological advances to reduce packaging costs are therefore
of crucial importance to maintain the competitive edge of EU packaging
and assembly companies.
Microelectronics packaging often makes use of thermosetting polymer
materials such as encapsulants, underfills or electrically conductive
adhesives. Initially, thermosetting polymers are liquid or paste-like
and are hardened through a curing process. An alternative approach to
conventional heating methods is the use of microwave energy that results
in substantially shorter curing times.
In the EU-funded project 'Frequency agile microwave bonding system' (
FAMOBS),
researchers developed a novel tool that uses pulsed microwave radiation
and selects a few cavity frequencies to improve the bonding quality.
Possible applications include curing underfill materials, bonding
components to a printed circuit board or even reworking defective
components.
This tool is an open-cavity bonding system that allows point
selective heating. As such, it can be integrated into a precision
placement machine to allow processing single components in a whole
printed circuit board. Furthermore, the open design enables simultaneous
placement, alignment and curing. Reel-to-reel processing is another
application of this technology.
Compared to a convection oven, the material is heated from the
inside, which results in shorter curing times. It is thus possible to
cure certain materials 10 times faster. The system has a process
accuracy of less than 10 micrometres.
With the exodus of a high volume of packaging and assembly companies
to low-wage countries, it becomes clear that the European manufacturing
industry needs to revitalise itself. Due to the significantly shorter
cycle times, this newly developed technology is expected to provide
European packaging companies a clear competitive advantage. It should
also allow them to produce assembly equipment and materials that will
feed into the Asian market.