Microvias are more reliable than through holes, so adding HDI to the design can improve reliability and reduce cost.
Meeting the predictable but challenging market-defined needs of
high-density (HD) PCBs requires new flexible design approaches that
provide higher I/O densities, higher performance and lower costs than
previously available solutions. In this paper, the four common
high-density interconnect (HDI) via architectures are compared to
determine how well each meets these diametrically opposed requirements.
The four via architectures to be examined are:
- Drilled sequential lamination
- Staggered sequential microvia build-up
- Stacked sequential microvia build-up
- Co-laminated any layer microvia build-up.
The
basis for comparison is looking at the complexity of the fabrication
process and expected yields. Design for manufacturing (DfM) now focuses
on yield management (YM), and via structure is a major contributor to
yield loss. This is contrasted to the resulting density, design
constrains and I/Os per square inch achieved.
Yield
issues are more difficult to pin down because they are dependent on a
number of variables and are largely statistically driven (i.e., the
greater the occurrence of a certain configuration, the greater the
likelihood of a board failure). This paper will propose a
simplification of the Wiebull Defect Density model as the basis for
predicting the first-pass yield (FPY) of new HDI boards in
manufacturing.
Introduction
An excellent way to describe interconnect complexity and density changes is with the Interconnect Technology Map, Figure 1.
To describe the component complexity of an assembly, the total
component connections (I/Os), including both sides of an assembly as
well as edge fingers or contacts, are divided by the total number of
components of the assembly. The resulting average leads (I/Os) per part
provide the X-axis of the chart. As ICs become more complex and their
I/Os increase, this number naturally goes up.
|

FIGURE 1.
The Interconnect Technology Map showing the effect of component density
on PCB technologies. The “Region of Advanced Technologies” shows
densities that will require sequential lamination or microvias.
(Source: Printed Circuit Handbook1).
|
When
the chart is used to describe surface-mount assemblies, the Y-axis
describes how complex it is to assemble the board by the number of
components per square inch or per square centimeter. This is component
density. As the parts become smaller and closer together, or the
substrates get smaller, this number naturally goes up. A second
assembly measure is average leads (I/Os) per square inch or per square
centimeter. This is the X-axis multiplied times the Y-axis.
By
charting products of a particular type over time, an analysis will show
how the interconnect technology is changing, its rate of change and the
direction of those changes. An example is given in Figure 1. The
evolution of this board as a 16-layer multilayer PCB (a. & b.) to a
12-layer sequentially laminated MCM-L with blind and buried drilled
vias (b.+) to its final form as an 8-layer HDI with sequential build-up
microvias (c.) is seen in Figure 1.
The area called
the Region of Advanced Technologies is where calculations and data have
shown that it is necessary to have a blind and buried via structure.
Therefore, this is the through-hole barrier or wall of HDI! Cross this,
and it now becomes cost effective to use HDI. Move too far, and it
becomes a necessity.
The HDI Vintage Chart
HDI
technologies in use today are comprised of three factors: the
dielectric materials, the methods of interstitial via hole (IVH)
formation and the method of metallization of the Z-axis via
connections. Twenty-one different HDI processes are either currently in
use or have been used recently, as seen in Figure 2.
|

FIGURE 2. HDI technologies vintage chart (Source: Printed Circuit Handbook2).
|
There
are eight different general dielectric materials currently being used
or used in recent HDI processes. IPC slash sheets such as IPC-4101B and
IPC-4104A cover many of these, but many are not yet specified by IPC
standards. These are:
- Photosensitive liquid dielectrics
- Photosensitive dry-film dielectrics
- Polyimide flexible film
- Thermally cured dry films
- Thermally cured liquid dielectrics
- Resin coated copper foil (RCC)
- Conventional FR-4 cores and prepregs
- Thermoplastics.
There
are seven different methods of forming the IVHs used in either current
or past HDI processes. Laser drilling is the most prominent, but the
other six come into use also:
1. Photo process to define vias in photo-dielectrics
2. Various laser drilling methods, including UV-Yag, UV-excimer and CO2
3. Mechanical drilling
4. Plasma drilling
5. Screen printing of via pastes
6. Photoimaging and etch of solid vias
7. Tool foil.
There are four different methods of metallizing the IVHs used in current or past HDI processes:
1. Fully additive electroless copper
2. Conventional electroless and electroplating copper
3. Conductive pastes
4. Fabricating solid metal vias.
This paper will examine four of these blind and buried stackups:
1. TV1: drilled sequential lamination
2. TV2: staggered sequential microvia build-up
3. TV3: stacked sequential microvia build-up
4. TV4: co-laminated any-layer microvia build-up.
Alternative Stackups Using Blind and Buried Vias
Four
common approaches for the blind and buried via stackups were selected.
Each structure used the same traces and spaces, as well as material
type and thicknesses to keep the impedances within specification. The
boards’ sizes and layers were reduced to the smallest that could be
autorouted to 100% completion and that the via structure would permit.
These are shown in Figure 3 and described here.
TV1: Drilled Sequential Lamination
The
only practical way to wire up a higher density board (average
pins/square inch > 120) and not use microvias is with drilled
sequential lamination. Figure 3a shows the 12-layer
multilayer stackup composed of two 4-layer multilayers, drilled and
plated and then laminated to two rigid cores with three pieces of
prepreg. Board size has been reduced 23% to 50 sq. in. and drill sized
reduced to a 0.008˝ finished hole size (FHS) for the four-layer
composite multilayers but remains at 0.010˝ FHS for the through-holes.
|

FIGURE 3.
The four blind and buried via stackups; a) sequential lamination and
drill, 12L; b) Type III staggered-vias, 10L; c) Type III stacked-vias,
8L; d) Type VI any layer vias, 8L.
|
TV2: Staggered Sequential Microvia Build-up
The staggered via IPC Type III stackup is the most popular and versatile. Figure 3b
shows the 10-layer multilayer stackup comprised of one-buildup layer on
each side of an eight-layer multilayer board, mechanical/laser drilled
and plated and then laminated to a piece of prepreg and foil. Board
size has been reduced 30.8% to 45 sq. in. and microvia drill size to a
0.006˝ FHS for the two buildup layers. The composite multilayer hole
size remains at a 0.010˝ FHS for the through holes and buried vias.
TV3: Stacked Sequential Microvia Build-up
The stacked via IPC Type III stackup is now becoming popular in North America. Figure 3c
shows the eight-layer multilayer stackup composed of two-buildup layers
on each side of a four-layer multilayer, mechanical/laser drilled and
plated and then laminated twice to pieces of prepreg and foil. Board
size has been reduced 43.1% to 37 sq. in. and the microvia drill size
to 0.006˝ FHS for the two buildup layers. The composite multilayer
remains at 0.010˝ FHS for the through holes and buried vias.
TV4: Co-Laminated Any Layer Microvia Build-up
The
any-layer via is an IPC Type VI stackup. This type is popular in Japan
and Asia for its high density. Nearly nine of the HDI Vintages in
Figure 2 are this type. Figure 3d shows the
eight-layer multilayer stackup composed of four double-sided layer pair
cores. Each is mechanically or laser drilled and plated, etched, and
then tested. These are then laminated with prepreg that also has vias.
This unique scheme allows any layer to connect to any other layer.
Board size has been reduced 50.8% to 32 sq. in. and the microvia drill
size to a 0.006˝ FHS. This stackup does not have any through holes!
PCB Basis
A
16-layer through-hole board was selected as the printed circuit basis
for the different design strategies. The 1517 pin FPBGA with 50 Ω
single-ended drivers and 100 Ω differential data pairs dominates the
board. Two other BGAs of 940 pins and 498 pins also complicate the
design. These are connected to 16 flash memories with 144 pins at 0.8
mm. The multilayer board is 10.0˝ x 7.8˝ with a full 1.5V power plane
and a 2.5V, 1.25V, 5V split power plane. A top view can be seen in Figure 4.
|

FIGURE 4. Placement of components for all test runs.
|
Setting Up HDI Routing
Using
an EDA tool with HDI design capability, setting up any of the various
21 different HDI architectures was very simple. The Constraint Editor
System (CES) allowed impedance, crosstalk, wiring, spacing and timing
to be easily specified for all the high-speed single-end and
differential nets, as well as by “Net Class” and “I/O” constraints.
Figure 5
shows three of the “configuration” menus that set up the different
blind and buried via structures. Menu a is the
blind/buried/through-hole via span as well as via diameter and
electrical characteristics. Menu b holds the via-to-via clearances for
stacked, inset or staggered vias. Menu c is the dynamic planes
generator for controlling planes spacing, copper pouring and electrical
characteristics.
|

FIGURE 5. Setup menus for a) HDI layer assignments; b) spacing and distances; c) planes pouring.
|
The
three complex BGAs were all fanned-out semi-automatically using the
unique blind/buried via available for that structure. The combination
of layer-stackup and microvia placement eliminated many of the larger
drilled through-holes and drilled buried vias. A circuit copy &
place command was used to replicate the breakout pattern keeping in
mind the layer bias so that the autorouter would pick up the trace
hangars.
The autorouter was optimized for each type
of blind/buried via structure and layer-pairing. Autorouting was
performed first by critical nets and build-up layers, then tuned and
smoothed. After the maximum utilization of the blind vias, the larger
through-hole and buried vias were allowed. The fact that the autorouter
could push and shove traces and microvias made for the most flexibility
in their being placed but in not disturbing the critical nets.
Performance of Microvias
The
results of the four sets of design runs were quite remarkable. Via
geometry, clearances and stackup have a profound affect on breakout and
routing. This was the overriding variable that permitted a smaller
board with fewer layers. With fewer through-holes, innerlayer routing
density was two to three times greater because of the additional space
freed up with the removal of the large drilled holes. The alternative
stackups of the HDI boards also allowed microvias to replace as many as
45% of the through holes. The routing layer-pairs of X-Y using
microvias as layer-transition greatly reduced the need for buried vias
and through holes. The results can be seen in Table 1.
|

TABLE 1. Summary of the five alternative stackups and via structures.
|
Summary of Through-Hole versus HDI Structures
To
summarize the positive effect blind and buried microvias have on board
size, layers and density, the chart in FIGURE 6 has been prepared. This
is a summary of 10 years of through hole to HDI design and fabrication
benchmarking. Each main Structure Column represents a Via Architecture,
from through holes to Type I, Type II and Type II HDI stackups. These
columns have been further separated into two metrics: Relative Cost
Index (RCI) and Density (DEN). Total layers separate the rows.
The
RCI metric contains real production quotations and prices from around
the world for high-volume production. The prices are all normalized to
the price of the eight-layer through-hole boards from China. Hence, the
relative cost as an index. The DEN metric is the average number of
component, connector and test pins (leads) on both sides of the board
divided by the board’s length and width. This is the typical number of
component pins that that size of board with that number of layers can
support. Boards with more power planes or extremely complex BGAs (>
700 pins) may require more layers than represented here.
The
typical HDI board, when benchmarked, shows a design approach of adding
layers for conventional through-hole routing, then moving to the right
of the chart in Figure 6 [PDF format]
(density and relative cost index for through hole to various HDI
structures) to avoid via starvation. This results in an instant RCI
increase of 30% to 40%. The alternative, as described in this paper,
can be found along the diagonal dashed line in Figure 6, using HDI to
reduce the size of the board and the total layers. This has the effect
of reducing the RCI by 30% to 50%. The results of the routing test on
the Test Vehicles 2 through 4 verify this observation.
First-Pass Yield
The
fabrication capability coefficient (FCC) is computed from a
fabricator’s electrical test data, the first-pass yield (FPY). This is
the yield of production before any repair or rework. PCB yield data is
not “normally distributed;” it is a “gamma distribution.” This is only
common-sense, as you can have a typically high-yielding board with some
bad production runs; the resulting mean and standard deviation would
reflect the lower yield data but on the “plus” side, you cannot have
greater than 100% yield. Thus, the normal mean and standard deviation
does introduce some errors that we will ignore for the calculation of
the FCC. If you have the ability to calculate and insert a
gamma-distribution average, by all means do it.
Fabrication Capability
The
basic truth about PCBs, substrates and hybrid circuits is that design
factors have a cumulative effect on manufacturing yield. These factors
all affect the ability to produce the product. Specifications may be
selected that individually do not adversely affect yields, but
cumulatively can dramatically reduce yield and profitability. A simple
algorithm is available3 that collects these factors into a single
metric called the Complexity Index (CI). It is given in Equation 1 below:
|

EQUATION 1.
|
Where:
Area = top area of the substrate to be designed
Holes = total number of drilled holes – blind, buried and through
Holes/unit area = holes divided by board area
Trace width = the minimum trace width
Layers = the total number of layers in the substrate
Annular ring = ½ the difference between the via land and the hole diameter
Hole diameter = finished hole size.
There
is no standard for the Complexity Index. It is whatever fits your data
the best. You need to experiment to find what definition of the CI
equation gives the highest r2 value (goodness of fit).
FPY
is affected primarily by the physical attributes of the board;
parametric panels (PCQR2) can quantify these. But random effects also
affect FPY-like handling, operator training, equipment maintenance,
production shifts and unexpected events. These show up in the high
variability of the yield predictions.
First-Pass Yield Calculations
The
FPY equation is derived from the Wiebull probability failure
equations4. This equation is of a more general form of the equation
typically used to predict ASIC yields by defect density (typically, A=1
for ASICs) and provided in Equation 2 as:
|

EQUATION 2.
|
Where:
FPY = first-pass yield
CI = complexity index
A, B = Fabrication Capability Coefficients
|

TABLE 2.
Four tables for calculating the FPY coefficients A and B using Excel.
a) PCB part design characteristics for complexity index; b) 10
production runs for PCB parts with electrical yields; c) Excel
transformation of yields and complexity index; d) Excel Mulreg results
with A & B determined.
|
To
determine the constants A and B in Equation 2, a fabricator must
characterize his manufacturing process by selecting a number of printed
circuits currently being produced (Table 2a) and
having various complexity indexes, hopefully some low, medium and high.
The first-pass yield (at electrical test without repair) of these
printed circuits for several production runs is recorded (Table 2b).
A statistical software program, such as Microsoft Excel, that has a
model-based regression analysis is then employed to determine the FCC
constants A and B, from this model, for the particular fabricator (Table 2c).
Constant
A determines the slope at the inflection of the yield curve, and
constant B determines the X-axis location of the inflection (Table 2d). The confidence level in yield predictability is determined by the statistical margin of error in the calculation of A and B.
Conclusion
|

TABLE 3. The effect PCB design and complexity has on first-pass yield and the resulting yielded relative costs of PCBs.
|
The
results in Table 1 show the improvements that blind and buried vias
provide in layer and size reduction. The relative costs are taken from
Table 1 by multiplying the RCI by the board size. Also important is the
reduction in drilled holes since this is a major influence on the
complexity index and FPY. When the relative costs are divided by FPY,
the results are seen in Table 3. The more complex HDI
via structures enable smaller boards with fewer layers and fewer
drilled holes. TV1 has a 29.3% savings over the through-hole version,
but TV2 is a 49.1% reduction; TV3 is a 58.0% reduction; and TV4 is the
largest with a 62.9% reduction in cost. What isn’t taken into account
here is the improvement in reliability that fewer through holes with a
lower aspect ratio (due to thinner boards) provide. Microvias with
their extremely low aspect ratio (AR < 1.0) are shown to be many
times more reliable than through holes. PCD&F
References
1. Printed Circuit Handbook 5th Edition, Coombs, McGraw-Hill, 2001, pp. 1.5
2. Printed Circuit Handbook 6th Edition, Coombs, McGraw-Hill, 2007, pp. 23.2
3. “Calculate Your Fabrication Capability Coefficient,” Happy Thoughts, CircuiTree, Feb 15, 2006, BNP, pp. 23.5
4. “The Need For Statistical Tools,” Happy Thoughts, CircuiTree, Oct. 15, 2002, BNP, pp. 23.5
Happy Holden is a senior technologist with Mentor Graphics. He can be reached at happy_holden@mentor.com. |