Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9812321 | Thin Solid Films | 2005 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Bonding of silicon wafers has been successfully achieved at temperatures as low as 60 °C. At 300 °C, the interfacial fracture energy was 1.55 J/m2. At 600 °C, sol-gel bonding provided superior interfacial fracture energy over classical hydrophilic bonding (3.4 J/m2 vs. 1.5 J/m2). The increase in the interfacial fracture energy is related to the increase in film density due to the sintering of the sol-gel interface with increasing temperature. The superior interfacial fracture energy obtained by sol-gel bonding at low temperature is due to the formation of an interfacial layer, which chemically bonds the two sol-gel coatings on each wafer. Application of a tensile stress on the resulting bond leads to fracture of the samples at the silicon/sol-gel interface.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Nanotechnology
Authors
C.J. Barbé, D.J. Cassidy, G. Triani, B.A. Latella, D.R.G. Mitchell, K.S. Finnie, K. Short, J.R. Bartlett, J.L. Woolfrey, G.A. Collins,