A typical PDIP:

Die

Part that has the actual active circuitry on it. Typically a few mm thick and can vary considerably in length and width. Most are rectangular in shape. This is a very complex part made of primarily silicon and silicon dioxide (SiO2), but also including aluminium, copper, arsenic, phosphorus, and more.

Resin mould

See for more detail

Its purpose is to protect the fragile die contained within. This includes physical stress and chemical stress such as moisture. On more advanced chips, it may also provide radiation protection or protections against reverse engineering. Typically an epoxy resin mixed with various additives such as glass.

Leadframe

Leads to provide a strong external connection to the internal circuitry.

The center portion is called by many names. Some of them include:

  • Paddle (as found in US patent 7638862)
  • Die mounting paddle [Plastic MEMS 68]
  • Carrier island (eg by Beck's failure analysis)
  • Mounting surface (as found in US patent 5610437)
  • Die attach pad (as found here)
  • Ceramic chip has “gold backing” and “bonding pad” here

As Beck's failure analysis is a well written published work I originally referred to it as a “carrier island.” However, die attach paddle or simply “paddle” seems to be the most common so I've standardized on that.

See here for more info on attaching dies to carrier

Bonding wire

Thin, usually gold, wires to electrically connect the leadframe to the die. For more details see the article on wire bonding.

Types

References

 
carrier.txt · Last modified: 2015/12/17 23:30 by azonenberg
 
Except where otherwise noted, content on this wiki is licensed under the following license: CC Attribution 4.0 International
Recent changes RSS feed Donate Powered by PHP Valid XHTML 1.0 Valid CSS Driven by DokuWiki