CMP Slurry for Advanced Packaging and TSV
CMP Slurry for Advanced Packaging and TSV
Advanced packaging and through-silicon vias have made CMP critical to the back end as well as the front end. This guide explains how CMP slurry supports advanced packaging and TSV — the thick-copper, dissimilar-material and hybrid-bonding challenges and how slurry choice adapts.
CMP Moves Into Packaging
Heterogeneous integration — stacking and bonding dies with through-silicon vias (TSV), redistribution layers (RDL), fan-out structures and hybrid bonding — has pushed CMP well beyond the transistor levels. These steps demand planar, clean surfaces, and the slurry requirements differ markedly from classic front-end CMP because the feature scale is larger and the material set unusual. For the selection method, see how to select a CMP slurry by material and process; for fundamentals, the pillar guide.
As performance gains increasingly come from packaging rather than transistor scaling alone, CMP for advanced packaging has become a fast-growing and strategically important application through 2026 and beyond.
TSV Reveal and the Thick-Copper Challenge
TSV and RDL involve far thicker copper than damascene interconnects — micrometres rather than nanometres — so CMP must remove large volumes of copper while still controlling dishing and erosion at the larger feature scale. In TSV reveal, the back of a thinned wafer is polished to expose the copper vias, which requires planarising silicon, liner and copper together. This is an extension of the chemistry described in the copper CMP slurry guide — oxidiser, complexing and inhibitor balance — scaled for thick-copper overburden and coarser topography.
Removing micrometres of copper instead of nanometres shifts the priorities toward high, stable rate and large-feature dishing control, while keeping defectivity low enough for subsequent bonding.
RDL and Fan-Out Planarization
Redistribution layers and fan-out packaging route signals across a reconstituted wafer or panel, often combining copper traces with polymer dielectrics and, in fan-out, moulding compound. CMP planarises these layers so that fine-line lithography can pattern the next level. The mix of soft polymer and copper, sometimes over large panel areas, demands slurries and processes tuned for uniformity across non-standard substrates rather than reused front-end products.
Hybrid Bonding's Demands
Hybrid bonding joins dies via dielectric-to-dielectric and copper-to-copper contact, and it is exquisitely sensitive to surface topography. The CMP step must deliver extremely flat, clean surfaces with copper recess held within a tight, controlled window — too much or too little recess prevents reliable bonding. This makes planarity, recess control and defectivity even more critical than in conventional steps, and it is one of the most demanding CMP applications in advanced packaging.
Planarizing Dissimilar Materials
Packaging surfaces often combine copper, dielectric, polymer, silicon and moulding compound — materials with very different removal behaviour — so selectivity and uniformity across dissimilar materials are central. The engineering parallels other demanding, specialised substrates such as the hard-material work in the sapphire polishing guide, in that the slurry must be tailored precisely to an unusual material set rather than adapted from a standard step.
Selecting a Packaging CMP Slurry
Define your structure — TSV reveal, RDL or fan-out planarization, or hybrid-bonding surface preparation — and its copper thickness, recess window, material mix and flatness targets. Prioritise stable high-rate copper removal for thick layers, and tight planarity and recess control for bonding surfaces, then validate on your own integration and substrate format. As packaging scales, slurry tailored to these steps is increasingly a competitive differentiator rather than a commodity choice.
Häufig gestellte Fragen
How is CMP used in advanced packaging?
How does TSV CMP differ from interconnect CMP?
Why is hybrid bonding so sensitive to CMP?
What makes packaging CMP slurries different?
Why is advanced packaging CMP growing in importance?
Talk to the JEEZ slurry engineering team
From first slurry selection to defectivity optimisation and multi-source qualification, JEEZ — Jizhi Electronic Technology Co., Ltd. — helps you match the right polishing slurry to your material and process targets.
Contact JEEZ →Part of the JEEZ Polishing Slurry knowledge series. Reviewed and updated June 2026 by Jizhi Electronic Technology Co., Ltd.