Die preparation

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Wafer glued on blue tape and cut into pieces
Wafer glued on blue tape and cut into pieces

Die preparation is a step of semiconductor device fabrication during which a wafer is prepared for IC packaging and IC testing. The process of die preparation typically consists of 2 steps: wafer mounting and wafer dicing.

[edit] Wafer mounting

Wafer mounting is a step that is performed during the die preparation of a wafer as part of the process of semiconductor fabrication. During this step, the wafer is mounted on a plastic tape that is attached to a ring. Wafer mounting is performed right before the wafer is cut into separate dice. The adhesive tape on which the wafer is mounted ensures that the individual dice remain firmly in place during 'dicing', as the process of cutting the wafer is called.

The picture below shows a 200 mm wafer after it was mounted and diced. The blue plastic is the adhesive tape. The wafer is the round disc in the middle. In this case, a large number of dice were already removed.

[edit] Semiconductor-die cutting

In the manufacturing of micro-electronic devices, die cutting or dicing is a process of reducing a wafer containing multiple identical integrated circuits to dice each containing one of those circuits.

During this process, a wafer with up to thousands of circuits is cut into individual pieces, each called a die. In between the functional parts of the circuits, a thin non-functional spacing is foreseen where a saw can safely cut the wafer without damaging the circuit. This spacing is called the scribe. The width of the scribe is very small, typically around 100 μm. A very thin and accurate saw is therefore needed to cut the wafer into pieces. Usually the dicing is performed with a water-cooled circular saw with diamond-tipped teeth.

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