4.7 Article

Quasi-in-situ observation of the grain growth and grain boundary movement in sintered Cu nanoparticle interconnects

Journal

ACTA MATERIALIA
Volume 236, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.actamat.2022.118135

Keywords

Grain growth; Grain boundary shifting; Nanoparticle sintering; Joining

Funding

  1. China Scholarship Council (CSC) [201806050 0 01]

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This study investigates the mechanisms of grain growth and twin formation in the bulk sintered Cu nanoparticle structure using a quasi-in-situ method. It is found that the grains continuously grow and become oriented during elevated temperature, and porosity has a greater impact on joint strength than grain or pore size. The high porosity interface between the sintered structure and the Cu substrate is eliminated due to subsequent grain boundary movement. This study provides the first detailed experimental observation of nanoscale grain growth, twin formation, and grain boundary movement in the sintered Cu structure, offering new guidance for strengthening Cu interconnections in power electronics.
Sintered Cu interconnection for power electronics has attracted considerable interest recently. Investiga-tion of grain growth during Cu nanoparticle sintering provides insight into the strengthening mechanism of the sintered structure. Currently, the literature on Cu nanoparticle sintering mechanism is limited and mainly focuses on the transmission electron microscopy (TEM) observation of a limited number of nanoparticles with an ultrathin region. This study employs a quasi-in-situ method to investigate the mechanism of grain growth and twin formation in the bulk sintered Cu nanoparticle structure. The grains were found to continuously grow accompanied by orientation unification which is attributed to grain boundary (GB) migration or dislocation motion at elevated temperature. Two mechanisms governing twin formation have been observed and detailed. The grain and pore size and porosity in the sintered Cu structure under different sintering conditions were measured and correlated to the joint strength. Porosity was found to be the dominant factor affecting joint strength rather than grain or pore size. The original bonding interface between the sintered structure and the Cu substrate has high porosity. However, subsequent GB movement during heating causes this interface to shift into the sintered structure, eliminating the high porosity interface. Meanwhile, a model predicting porosity evolution was used to identify the dominant diffusion mechanism. This study constitutes the first detailed experimental observation of nanoscale grain growth, twin formation and GB movement at the interface and in the bulk sintered Cu structure. This novel mechanism of GB shifting could provide new guidance for strengthening the sintered Cu interconnections for power electronics.(c) 2022 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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