Abstract
Aluminum–aluminum wafer bonding is becoming increasingly important in the production of CMOS microelectromechanical systems. So far, successful bonding has required extreme processing temperatures of 450 °C or more, because the chemically highly stable oxide layer acts as a diffusion barrier between the two aluminum metallization layers. By using the ComBond® system, in which a surface treatment and subsequent wafer bonding are both performed in a high vacuum cluster, for the first time successful Al–Al wafer bonding was possible at a temperature of 150 °C. The bonded interfaces were characterized using C-mode scanning acoustic microscopy and transmission electron microscopy, and featured areas of oxide-free, atomic contact.
Original language | English |
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Number of pages | 5 |
Journal | Microsystem Technologies |
Volume | 23 |
Publication status | Published - Aug 2017 |
Fields of science
- 210006 Nanotechnology
- 103 Physics, Astronomy
- 103020 Surface physics
- 103021 Optics
JKU Focus areas
- Engineering and Natural Sciences (in general)