English: This chip has been a long time coming. When I originally tried opening it and scraping away at it like a traditional Intel chip I was greeted with this: flic.kr/p/2kx95ss
From past experience I know that when you see that kind of structure it is game over and it cannot be removed via the razor method without destroying the chip.
So, I bought an ultrasonic cleaner, ferric chloride and glass etching paste and after experimenting of some sacrificial chips I dunked this one into the ferric chloride. After several rounds a lot of material had been removed but there were some metal layers which were not budging.
After discussing with Martijn Boer, it seemed like I should be able to use the glass etching paste to attack the silicon layer underneath this metal layer. I placed the chip into a beaker with some water and dissolved some paste in it and let it run for about an hour in the ultra sonic cleaner. This is the result, I may have gone a bit too long on this since unlike ferric chloride, glass etching paste attacks the silicon, which happens to be what the layer we are interested in is made of >:(. As you can see it started to eat too deep into some spots on the chip.
This chip is HUGE, so I had to get funky with how I captured it. Similar to the memory controller I posted previously, I switched my camera's grid to 6x4 which means I pan a greater distance in the x axis every time I switch to a new column. Still had lots of warping which was corrected in Photoshop using a tool called "perspective crop" which worked wonders.
Die Size: (W) 14.79mm x (L) 10.35mm
Camera: SONY A6000
Number of Images: 240
Panorama Y Axis: 16 Images
Panorama X Axis: 15 Images
ISO: 100
Shutter Speed: 1.3"
Light Source: Led on side of objective
DIC: No
Overlap: ? (Not sure, I changed grid to 6x4)
Microscope Objective: 5X
Microscope Eyepiece: DSLR Mount
Grid Used: 6x4 (Panning Movement Aid)
Capture Motion: ZigZag
Stitching Software: Microsoft ICE
Other Software: Photoshop for de-skewing
to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work
to remix – to adapt the work
Under the following conditions:
attribution – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use.
share alike – If you remix, transform, or build upon the material, you must distribute your contributions under the same or compatible license as the original.