Замечания:1 创始人: Site Editor Publish Time: 2026-02-08 Origin: Веб - сайт
Guide to the whole process control and
technical optimization of the bonding wire production process
Introduction: Technical positioning of
precision wire manufacturing
As a "neural network"
interconnected within a semiconductor package, the diameter accuracy (±0.1 μm)
and surface quality (Ra≤0.05 μm) directly determine the reliability of wire
bonding. In the manufacturing of ultra-fine wires below 0.1mm, small
fluctuations in each step can lead to bond failure – statistics show that 35%
of bond failures are due to defects in the drawing process, 28% are related to
annealing quality, and 17% are due to improper tension control in the winding
process.
As semiconductor packaging evolves to
advanced architectures such as chiplets and 3D stacking, bonding wires are
facing dual challenges: on the one hand, the wire diameter continues to shrink
to less than 15μm (equivalent to 1/5 the diameter of a human hair), and on the
other hand, the material system is expanding from traditional gold wire to
copper-based and silver-based alloys. This change requires the transformation
of the production process from "empirical control" to "digital
precise control", and this paper systematically sorts out the technical
points and optimization paths of the three core processes of wire drawing,
annealing and winding.
1. Wire drawing process: the art of
material deformation and precision control
The wire drawing process gradually draws
metal billets with a diameter of about 1 mm into ultra-fine wires below 10 μm
through the plastic deformation of the mold, and the technical difficulty
increases exponentially with the decrease of wire diameter.
1.1 Comparison of equipment technology
classification and performance
Contemporary wire drawing equipment has
formed a complete technical pedigree, which can be divided into four levels
according to processing capacity: processing billets with a wire diameter of
> 1.0mm, using multiple passes of continuous stretching (usually 6-8
passes), typical models such as domestic CL-3000, the tensile force can reach
500N, suitable for the preliminary forming of brass, copper and other blanks.
The processing range is 0.1-1.0mm, and it needs to be equipped with a tension
closed-loop control system (accuracy ±1%). The German Niehoff ML series middle
drawing machine is driven by a servo motor, which can achieve stable control of
15-20% of the diameter reduction rate per pass, which is especially suitable
for intermediate forming of bonded copper wires. For 0.01-0.1mm wires, the mold
accuracy needs to reach ±0.5μm. Kobe Steel's UF series fine drawing machines
are equipped with a laser in-line diameter gauge (sampling frequency 1kHz),
which can compensate for wire diameter deviations caused by die wear in real
time (correction < 0.3μm per hour). For the critical process of handling
< 0.01 mm (10 μm), the equipment needs to have a vibration-proof foundation
(vibration amplitude < 5 μm) and a constant temperature environment
(23±0.5°C). The internationally leading German Schumacher ULT series adopts a
magnetic levitation guide system, which can control the wire vibration during
the wire drawing process within 2μm.
The choice of lubrication method directly
affects the quality of the wire:
|
Lubrication method |
Core technical features |
Advantage scenarios |
Mold life impact |
|
Dry brushed |
Solid lubricant (molybdenum disulfide
based), coefficient of friction 0.15-0.2 |
Rough drawing process (>0.5mm), high
carbon steel |
Reduced mold life by 20-30% |
|
Wet brushed |
Emulsion circulation system
(concentration 5-10%) with cooling rate 15°C/s |
Thin drawn / ultra-fine drawn,
copper-based, silver-based materials |
30-40% longer mold life |
The wet drawing system reduces the wire
break rate in the ultra-fine drawing stage from 1.2 times/km for the dry
process to 0.3 times/km through the "lubrication-cooling-cleaning"
trinity. The practice of a semiconductor material company shows that after
using imported wet wire drawing machines, the surface scratch rate of bond
alloy wires is reduced by 75%, and the bonding yield rate is increased to
99.2%.
1.2 Mold material science and maintenance
system
As the "heart" of the wire
drawing process, the material selection and maintenance system of the mold
varies with the bonding wire material: Polycrystalline diamond (PCD) mold: Made
of nanodiamond particles sintered, the hardness can reach HV8000, suitable for
hard materials such as palladium-plated copper wire. Its optimal use conditions
are: the drawing speed is < 6m/s, the reduction rate per pass is < 18%,
and the service life in the processing of palladium-plated copper wire can reach
25km, which is 3 times that of carbide molds.
Natural diamond mold: Processed from single
crystal diamond with a purity of more than 99.9%, the surface roughness can be
polished to Ra0.01μm, suitable for the ultra-fine drawing process of soft
materials such as gold wire and silver wire. However, they are expensive (about
5 times that of PCD molds) and have poor impact resistance, so they need to
avoid tensile fluctuations of > 5%.
Establishing a hierarchical maintenance
system is key to ensuring mold performance:
|
Bonding wire type |
Material Hardness (HV) |
Polishing cycle (h) |
Replacement Threshold (km) |
Typical wear characteristics |
|
Bond alloy wire |
80-90 |
200 |
50 |
Wear in the inlet area leads to wire
diameter out-of-error |
|
Bonded copper wire |
120-140 |
100 |
30 |
The scratch in the working area forms a
groove on the surface of the wire |
|
Palladium-plated copper wire |
150-170 |
80 |
25 |
The wear of the exit area creates a flare
effect |
|
Silver alloy wire |
70-85 |
150 |
45 |
Uniform wear leads to a slow increase in
wire diameter |
Die wear monitoring can be done using acoustic emission technology – when processing palladium-plated copper wire, preventive polishing is arranged when the RMS value of the acoustic emission signal increases from the initial 0.5mV to 1.2mV, while the surface quality of the wire remains at Ra<0.08μm.

1.3 Material adaptability of process
parameters
There is a strict matching relationship
between the drawing speed and the ductility of the material, and the principle
of "the higher the hardness, the lower the speed":
Bond alloy wire: 6-10m/s is recommended in
the ultra-fine drawing stage (<25μm), when the plastic deformation of the
material is uniform, and the work hardening index is stable at 0.4-0.45. Speeds
exceeding 12m/s are prone to "necking", resulting in wire diameter
fluctuations of > 0.5μm.
Palladium-plated copper wire: Due to the
difference in hardness between the palladium layer (HV180) and the copper
matrix (HV110), the speed should be controlled at 3-6m/s. A company found
through DOE experiments that 5m/s is the optimal balance point - it can not
only ensure the output of 1.2km per hour, but also control the cracking rate of
the coating below 0.03%.
Silver alloy wire: Silver's low hardness
(HV60) makes it prone to sticking, with a speed set in the range of 3-8m/s,
while increasing the lubricant concentration to 8-10% (5% for ordinary wires)
to prevent wires from contacting each other using surface tension.
Lubricant management implements a
"concentration gradient strategy": rough drawing stage: 8-10% high
concentration emulsion with a focus on cooling effect (taking away more than
90% of the heat of deformation), medium drawing stage: 5-7% concentration,
balancing lubrication and cleaning function, ultra-fine drawing stage: 2-3% low
concentration, reducing residue (controlled at 1-3ppm).
For silver alloy wires, a special
formulation containing benzotriazole (BTA) (e.g., patented US8822567B2) is used
to prevent oxidation discoloration of silver by forming an adsorption film
layer, and experimental data show that the surface oxidation rate can be
reduced by 60%.
2. Annealing process: the key to stress
elimination and performance regulation
The annealing process eliminates the work
hardening caused by the wire drawing process through thermal energy, allowing
the wire to obtain the required strength (200-350MPa) and elongation (15-25%)
for bonding, and its core is the precise control of the synergy of
"temperature-time-protective atmosphere".
2.1 Equipment layout and technical
characteristics
The layout of the annealing equipment
directly affects the straightness of the wire: Horizontal annealing furnace:
simple structure, suitable for thick diameter wire (>50μm). However, gravity
causes the wire to sag (up to 50μm at 1m length) and needs to be corrected by a
guide wheel set spaced 30cm apart. Vertical annealing furnace: The wire runs in
a vertical state, completely eliminating gravity-induced deformation, making it
the preferred equipment for ultra-fine filaments (<25μm). Sumitomo Japan's
VAF series vertical annealing furnaces are maglev guided (no mechanical
contact), which can control the straightness of 15μm silver wire to within
10μm/m.
Modern annealing furnaces have achieved
multi-zone temperature precise control (±1°C), and the typical three-zone
temperature control scheme is: preheating zone: the temperature is set to
60-70% of the target annealing temperature, the lubricant residual on the
surface of the wire (mainly mineral oil components) is removed, and the annealing
zone: the core reaction zone is set to 180-450°C according to the material
(gold wire 300-350°C, copper wire 400-450°C).Cooling zone: Rapid cooling with
inert gas (cooling rate 5-10°C/s) to prevent excessive grain growth
Scientific ratio of process parameters
The composition of the protective
atmosphere is critical to the quality of annealing, and a typical 95% N₂+5% H₂
gas mixture has a dual effect: hydrogen (reducible): eliminates oxide layers on
the surface of the wire (e.g. CuO, Cu₂O of copper), detected by
thermogravimetric analysis (TGA), reduces the oxygen content from 0.15% to less
than 0.03%, nitrogen (inert): as a carrier gas, Maintain a slightly positive
pressure (50-100Pa) in the furnace to prevent outside air intrusion, and the
gas flow rate needs to match the running speed of the wire, following the
"linear speed - flow" formula: Q=k×v×d², where k is the material
coefficient (copper wire 1.2, silver wire 0.9), v is the linear speed (m/min),
and d is the wire diameter (mm). When a 15μm gold wire is running at 10m/min,
the optimal flow rate is 3-4L/min, where annealing uniformity (σ≤3%) is
optimal. The matching of annealing temperature to take-up speed follows the
principle of "conservation of energy": for a 25μm diameter bonded
wire, the take-up speed can be increased from 8m/min to 12m/min when the
annealing temperature is increased from 300°C to 350°C (maintaining the same
thermal energy input). Excessive energy input can lead to grain coarsity (from
50nm to 200nm), resulting in wire elongation exceeding 30%, which is not
conducive to bond synthesis.
Annealing strategies for special materials
Annealing of copper-based bonded wires
requires stricter atmosphere control: Palladium copper wire: Hydrogen ratio
needs to be increased to 8-10% to prevent oxidation of palladium (PdO causes a
40% decrease in bond strength), bare copper wire: Organic protective film
(thickness 2-5nm) is applied immediately after annealing, and the carbon-oxygen
ratio (C/O) of the protective film is >confirmed by XPS analysis to be 3.0,
which can be stored in air for 72 hours without oxidation
The annealing of silver alloy wire is prone
to the phenomenon of "hydrogen embrittlement", and the solutions
include: 1Reduce the proportion of hydrogen to 3%, 2Add the vacuum treatment
process after annealing (-0.09MPa, 30min). 3. Adopt segmented cooling (slow
cooling to 200°C first, then rapid cooling).
3. Winding process: precision winding and
tension management
The winding process neatly winds the
annealed wire on a reel (usually 500m or 1000m gauge), and its quality directly
affects the pay-off stability of downstream bonding equipment - statistics show
that a >5% fluctuation in winding tension can increase the bond breakage
rate by 3 times.
3.1 Comparison of equipment technology
evolution and performance
Winding equipment has evolved from
traditional stationary take-up to an intelligent adjustable system:
|
Technical indicators |
Stationary take-up |
Adjustable take-up |
Intelligent compensation system |
|
Inclination control |
±3-5° |
±0.5° |
±0.1° |
|
Tension fluctuations |
15-20% |
≤8% |
≤3% |
|
Wiring accuracy |
±0.2mm |
±0.05mm |
±0.02mm |
|
Applicable wire diameter |
>50μm |
20-50μm |
<20μm |
|
Typical models |
Domestic RX-100 |
German Reelcraft 7000 |
Japan Sanki SC-9000 |
The core advantage of the intelligent
compensation system is the real-time monitoring of the cable position using a
laser profile sensor (sampling frequency 500Hz).
, servo motor-driven lateral adjustment
mechanism (response time < 50ms), tension controller based on fuzzy PID
algorithm,
According to the production data of a
packaging material company, after upgrading the intelligent winding system, the
unwinding success rate of 15μm gold wire has increased from 85% to 99.2%, and
the effective utilization rate of each roll of wire has increased by 12%.
3.2 Material science of guide wheel systems
The guide rollers, as a key component of
wire contact, are selected according to the principle of "hardness
matching": PTFE guide wheels: Shore D 55 hardness for coarse wires > 50
μm. Its low coefficient of friction (0.04) reduces scratches on the wire
surface, but requires monthly wear testing (allowed groove depth < 5μm). POM
Guide Wheel: Hardness up to HV800 after chrome plating for wires in the 20-50μm
range. Surfaces should maintain a mirror finish of Ra≤0.2 μm and should be
ultrasonic cleaned with isopropyl alcohol (40 kHz, 5 minutes) weekly to remove
lubricant residues. Ceramic guide wheel: Made of zirconia (ZrO₂) material, with a hardness of HV1200 or higher, designed for <
20μm ultrafilament. The formation of a 0.5μm oil reservoir on the surface
through laser microtexture technology can increase the lubrication effect by
50%, while controlling the micro-scratch rate to less than 0.3 /m.
The maintenance of guide wheels implements
a "three-level inspection" system:
1. Daily: Visually inspect the surface for
obvious damage
2. Weekly: roundness meter detection
(allowable deviation ≤2μm).
3. Monthly: White light interferometer
re-test roughness (no more than 120% of the initial value).
3.3 Material adaptability of tension
control
The sensitivity of wires of different
materials to tension is significantly different:
Gold wire: good ductility (20-25%), can
withstand large tension fluctuations (±8%), recommended tension value 0.5-1.0cN
(corresponding to 25μm wire diameter), copper wire: high rigidity (elongation
15-20%), tension needs to be stable at 0.8-1.2cN, fluctuation control within
±5%, silver wire: easy to produce plastic deformation, tension is set to
0.4-0.7cN, and the winding process needs to be linearly decreasing (5%
reduction per 100m), the tension control adopts a "segmentation
strategy": initial winding (0-200m): higher tension (110% of the set
value) to ensure tight fixation of the wire, middle (200-800m): standard
tension, constant,End (800-1000m): Reduced to 90% of the set value to prevent
slack at the end of the wire, for ultrafine filaments with a diameter of <
20μm, a tension sensor (accuracy ±0.01cN) and a servo feedback system are
required, and the sampling frequency is not less than 100Hz, ensuring a tension
fluctuation of <3% during the acceleration/deceleration phase.
4. Whole process quality control and
technology trends
4.1 Key process parameter monitoring system
Establish a real-time monitoring network
covering three major processes:
|
Process |
Monitor parameters |
Testing equipment |
Control precision |
Early warning threshold |
|
Drawing |
Wire diameter |
Laser diameter gauge |
±0.1μm |
±0.3μm |
|
Surface |
Optical profiler |
Ra≤0.05μm |
Ra>0.08μm |
|
|
anneal |
temperature |
Infrared thermal imager |
±2℃ |
±5℃ |
|
Hydrogen concentration |
Online analyzer |
±0.1% |
< 4% or > 6% |
|
|
Winding |
tension |
Microtension sensor |
±0.02cN |
±0.05cN |
|
Cable location |
Laser displacement sensor |
±0.01mm |
±0.03mm |
A leading company implemented this
monitoring system to increase the CPK value of the production process from 1.33
to 1.67, and the product defect rate from 300ppm to less than 50ppm.
Future technology development direction
Bonded wire production technology is
evolving in three directions: Intelligent manufacturing: Digital twin system:
simulates drawing die wear and wire deformation in virtual space, with a
prediction accuracy of up to 92%, adaptive control: real-time optimization of
wire drawing speed and annealing temperature based on AI algorithms (such as
random forests) to expand the process window by 40%, and closed-loop recovery
of lubricant: 95% through nanofiltration technology The above emulsion
recycling reduces the amount of hazardous waste disposed of, and the
low-hydrogen annealing process: development of a new catalyst to reduce the
amount of hydrogen from 5% to 2% while maintaining the same reduction effect, development
of gradient hardness mold (surface HV10000, matrix HV3000) for copper alloy
nano-coated wires, optimization of gold - Annealing regime of silver composite
wires to determine the optimal temperature-time curve by synchronous thermal
analysis (STA).
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