Siyu Chen , Kewen Shi , Ziwen Kong , Yinji Ma , Xue Feng
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Successful chip peeling from a substrate facilitates the transfer process for obtaining the final functional chips, but remains a challenge in the practical production of ultra-thin chips. Flexible ultra-thin chips are prone to fragmentation during the peeling process, due to their fragility. In this study, a substrate pre-stretching process is introduced to the picking process to achieve a high yield of chip peeling, and this process is explored via modelling and experiments. The chip–adhesive pre-stretched substrate structure is modelled, involving both multi-needle ejection and vacuum suctioning, within the framework of Timoshenko’s beam theory. The theoretical analysis is validated using finite element analysis to compare the surface stress distribution on the chip and tip stress within the adhesive layer. During the peeling process, the competitive fracture behaviour of the chip between cracking and peeling is analysed using a dimensionless peeling health index as a metric to assess the health status of the chip. The effects of substrate pre-stretching on the adhesive layer stress, chip layer stress, and peeling health index are analysed. As substrate pre-stretching is found to improve the peeling health index only in the case of needle ejection, but impairs the peeling health index in the case of vacuum suctioning, needle ejection is considered the sole effective peeling method when a substrate pre-stretching process is introduced. Furthermore, through meticulous experimental verification, it is confirmed that pre-stretching of the substrate can significantly improve the success rate of chip peeling.
期刊介绍:
The International Journal of Solids and Structures has as its objective the publication and dissemination of original research in Mechanics of Solids and Structures as a field of Applied Science and Engineering. It fosters thus the exchange of ideas among workers in different parts of the world and also among workers who emphasize different aspects of the foundations and applications of the field.
Standing as it does at the cross-roads of Materials Science, Life Sciences, Mathematics, Physics and Engineering Design, the Mechanics of Solids and Structures is experiencing considerable growth as a result of recent technological advances. The Journal, by providing an international medium of communication, is encouraging this growth and is encompassing all aspects of the field from the more classical problems of structural analysis to mechanics of solids continually interacting with other media and including fracture, flow, wave propagation, heat transfer, thermal effects in solids, optimum design methods, model analysis, structural topology and numerical techniques. Interest extends to both inorganic and organic solids and structures.