Stacked-Die Package Design Gets Easier

June 1, 2003
One of Cadence's big announcements at DAC concerned a new auto-wirebond capability for designing stacked-die packages. For space-constrained cell phones and wireless handheld devices, reduced chip-size advantages can be gained from stacking die two,...

One of Cadence's big announcements at DAC concerned a new auto-wirebond capability for designing stacked-die packages. For space-constrained cell phones and wireless handheld devices, reduced chip-size advantages can be gained from stacking die two, three, and four high. Unfortunately, successfully designing a stacked-die package has not been an easy task. Most stacked-die packages use wirebonding for electrical interconnect. For a package designer, this results in hundreds of wires in a stack and greatly increased complexity.

To address this complexity, the new Cadence Auto Wirebond capability automates the design process for stacked die. It includes features to reduce time-consuming iterations and ensure product reliability. Automated wirebonding capabilities are now integrated into the Cadence Advanced Package Design (APD) Suite—an environment for the rules-based physical design of complex, high-density packages. Other features include the ability to bond as many die as desired; use different spacing rules for each die and quadrant; and create multiple bonding patterns so that one substrate can handle multiple-die combinations. The Advanced Package Designer also provides the capability to combine flip-chip and wirebond die in the same design.

This stacked-die automated-wirebonding capability is part of the Advanced Package Designer version 15.0. For a one-year license, it starts at a U.S. list price of $27,000. It is supported on the Solaris, HP UX, and IBM AIX platforms as well as Windows NT and 2000.

Cadence Design Systems, Inc. 555 River Oaks Parkway, San Jose, CA 95134; (800) 746-6223, www.cadence.com.
About the Author

John Blyler

John Blyler has more than 18 years of technical experience in systems engineering and program management. His systems engineering (hardware and software) background encompasses industrial (GenRad Corp, Wacker Siltronics, Westinghouse, Grumman and Rockwell Intern.), government R&D (DoD-China Lake) and university (Idaho State Univ, Portland State Univ, and Oregon State Univ) environments. John is currently the senior technology editor for Penton Media’s Wireless Systems Design (WSD) magazine. He is also the executive editor for the WSD Update e-Newsletter.

Mr. Blyler has co-authored an IEEE Press (1998) book on computer systems engineering entitled: ""What's Size Got To Do With It: Understanding Computer Systems."" Until just recently, he wrote a regular column for the IEEE I&M magazine. John continues to develop and teach web-based, graduate-level systems engineering courses on a part-time basis for Portland State University.

John holds a BS in Engineering Physics from Oregon State University (1982) and an MS in Electronic Engineering from California State University, Northridge (1991).

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