I thought it is always possible to put circuit under the bumps? The more complicated flip-chip has the pad driver inside the core also. In this case, it is obvious that the area is taken up by the pad and not core logic or macro can be placed there.
That may depends on what kind of circuitry you have. Usually you want to put circuitry sensitive to alpha particles far away from bumps, such as memory cells and flip-flop to reduce your soft-error rates.
That may depends on what kind of circuitry you have. Usually you want to put circuitry sensitive to alpha particles far away from bumps, such as memory cells and flip-flop to reduce your soft-error rates.
stress effect due to bump: No clue... I don't think this can affect your transistor since bump is far away from your transistor. The stress may affect how you choose your top level interconnect and dielectric materials.[/quote]
This image shows the difference between wire bond and solder bump packagings. In the later case one says it's a flip chip: the chip is up side down.
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