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Using Electrostatic Discharge Test Method for Full Characterization of Dissipative and Conductive Materials Ber-Chin Yap(1), Larry Fromm(2) (1) Finisar Malaysia Sdn Bhd, Plot1, Kinta FIZ, Chemor 31200 Perak Malaysia. Email:[email protected] (2) Finisar, 1308, Moffett Park Drive, Sunnyvale CA94089-1133. Email:[email protected] For many years, DC resistance and charge decay testing have been used to characterize dissipative materials. However, we have observed these tests to be sometimes inadequate in the face of non-ohmic behavior of some dissipative materials. We propose new testing methods using an ESD pulsation technique. This technique could determine an on-set threshold of strong discharge (> 10 mA in 100 nS) for a specific dissipative material. Employing static bleed-down control methods above this threshold could potentially endanger ESDS products. A Human Dissipative Glove Model simulation has established that a device could be damaged at a shifted voltage level after the on-set threshold of a strong discharge through a dissipative glove. I. Introduction Dissipative materials have been widely used in ESD protection areas. The principal objective is to facilitate an effective way for prevention of static charge accumulation at all times so that a relatively “charge free” environment could be maintained at ESD safe workstations. However, in the real world, there are also possibilities of working fixtures or ESDS devices that need to be in electrical isolation or floating. In such scenarios, the fixtures and or the ESDS parts may not be completely free of static accumulation. It is then desirable to prevent subsequent ESD including Machine Model (MM), Charge Device Model (CDM)[1], Charge Board Model (CBM), and/or Charge Strip Model (CSM) [2]. To achieve this, dissipative material needs to be placed in strategic locations to furnish a slow, safe redistribution of potential static charge from fixtures or from an ESDS device at the proper time. With the evolution towards below 100 nano-meter technologies, the discrete device ESD susceptibility is expected to be more acute. For instance, the CDM thresholds of the current GMR heads have been already lower than 5 volts. Therefore, it is critical to implement optimum ESD control measures for the safe removal of even very low levels of static accumulation on parts resulting from process tribocharging effects for example. Ionization has been widely adopted as a key means for the safe reduction of low charge accumulation levels. However, the ionization control method has some limitations, such as slow decay time and inaccessibility under certain constraints during assembly process. In some cases, one may find that the sole dependence on ionization control environment may not be sufficient to mitigate ESD risk during fast handling processes [3]. Better process engineering design can create a slow, safe discharge (ground) path using a dissipative material in direct contact with a charged part or material in order to reduce ESD risks. This engineering activity is usually designed within the specific process and or between two processes. In current practice, the choice of dissipative materials relies on the DC resistance measurement or test [4] at a single voltage point. This may also be complimented by a charge decay time test using a Charge Plate Monitor [5]. Both methods of characterization are employed with the objective of better working material achieving an optimized “charge free” workstation environment. Such information is partial. It could leave some doubt whether such data is adequate when one is employing dissipative material tested in this manner to provide a slow, safe path for potential static charge to dissipate from the ESD sensitive part to ground. Furthermore, another potential shortcoming in the above test method has also been shown more recently [6]. The DC standard test at a single fixed driving DC source of a Mega-Ohmmeter at either 10 V or 100 V is likely not sufficient to cover the critical characteristics of materials in the low voltage regime below 10 V. For most materials, the I-V relationship could be nonlinear over a wide range of currents and voltages. As such there could be risks using a single, constant value to denote the resistance over a wide I-V range. This non-linearity is also known as a non-ohmic electrical characteristic of materials. This non-ohmic behavior is particularly more profound for dissipative materials. For instance, a dissipative material may be measured by a DC Mega-Ohmmeter to have a resistance of around 1000 Mega-Ohms at 100 V, but at 2000 V, its effective resistance might be more in the range of 1000 or lower. The implication is that the lower resistance at a high voltage could result in a high current passing through a very thin layer of dissipative conduction path between electrodes. The Joule’s heat generated could cause certain materials along the path to heat up excessively -perhaps close to or beyond their melting point. Furthermore, in association with such high current, the material would turn into a better conductor compromising the objective of a slow, safe discharge as originally intended. The matter is further complicated by the fact that an ESD even is an extremely fast pulsation in most cases. All these pose a major technical challenge to any attempt to modify the existing DC test method on dissipative materials over a wider voltage range. Therefore, any modification based upon the existing DC test meter may not be suitable or practical. In our view, voltage and current pulsation techniques, such as those that have been used for the characterization of ESD protection devices on ICs or sintered ceramic varistors at higher voltages and currents, would definitely have advantages over traditional DC testing methods. In this paper, we shall present the results of our study using the electrostatic discharge technique, which could be viewed as a sub-set of pulsation techniques, for the characterization of materials. For the present characterization technique, we have adopted the standard HBM simulator used in simulation of device ESD failure threshold as a pulse source for our evaluation testing of both conductive and dissipative materials. This method appears to offer better insight and information concerning the material’s true electrical behavior during ESD events. We intend to discuss both the test method and results from our work. II. Dissipative Materials There are several types of dissipative materials [7]. One of the most common of these is the composite material. Basically, it is made from a mixture of two components. One is a base material from an insulative plastic, and the other is a filler of conductive powder or fibers. A conductive or dissipative floor tile is one of the common composite materials that have been widely used for making ESD safe flooring in factories. In the fabrication process, tiny grains or segment fiber filler will be added and pre-mixed inside the melted viscous plastic base materials before solidification. A schematic micro-view of this material structure suggests that the conductive grains or fibers will form a matrix of “conductive islands” that are surrounded by the base insulator. With the increase of percentage (by volume) of fillers, the inter layers of insulator between two adjacent conductive grains or fibers could be very thin. These conductive elements are irregular in both shapes and sizes. Therefore, this inter insulator layer could vary in thickness even for those very homogeneous mixtures. There would be location(s) in the inter layer much thinner than others. When a voltage is applied to a pair of two close adjacent conductive elements separated by the insulator layer, electrical conduction can be initiated through those thinnest spots on this inter insulator layer. The physics of the electrical property in the formation of two conductive elements separated by an insulator layer could be a phenomenological equivalent to a system consisting of two potential wells separated by a potential barrier. Based upon the above physical picture, it has been theorized that three possible conduction mechanisms exist under the applied voltage, or more appropriately, under the influence of an external applied electrical field. In the low voltage range, the conduction is believed due to electrons moving across the potential barrier “wall” through two possible kinds of charge transport mechanism. Namely, the process could be a thermal activated barrier hopping or a quantum mechanical barrier tunneling or both. At high voltages, the applied electric field could reach to a sufficient strength to cause an onset of multiple impact ionizations. This results an avalanche of dielectric breakdown across the insulator [8]. These three conduction mechanisms would cause the overall electrical property of the material to be non-ohmic in behavior. For other types of dissipative materials, such as some compound thermoplastics, we are not as concerned about the conduction mechanisms in the low voltage or electric field regime. However, it is expected that under high electric field or voltage, a similar, avalanche impact ionization process will also take over as the main conduction mechanism in these materials. During the onset or initialization of high intensity current conduction, the pulse technique would have the advantage of limiting or lessening Joule’s heating impact at a localized contact spot , i.e. an extremely short pulse duration of less than 100 nS. Such a short heat pulse would enable one to extend the applied voltage to a much higher range, which would otherwise be far beyond the safety capability of the DC testing method applied to a material. III. Measurement Techniques We have adopted the standard ESD simulator with Human Body Model or HBM discharge network comprised of a 100 pF capacitor and a 1500 resistor to perform ESD pulsation on the material under test. A Thermo KeyTek Model 2000 MiniZap has been used for the HBM simulation on conductive materials. The current discharge pulse pattern have been captured by a Tektronix CT-1 current probe coupled into a Tektronix Digital Oscilloscope with a 2.5 GS/s sampling rate and a bandwidth of 300 MHz. A schematic test setup is shown in Figure 1. Scope HBM Simulator CT-1 breakdown in conduction for a dissipative material at higher voltages. A superposition of both the EMI component and the actual discharge current pattern could result in a distorted, captured signal. This low EMI was generated from the trigger button and or from its control circuitry of the simulator during pulse activation. The discharge ground wire passing through the center of CT-1 transformer probe would act as a dipole antenna to pick up such low level EMI. To overcome the interference, we had taken a 20 pF charge plate of a Monroe 268 Charge Plate Monitor (CPM) which we connected in parallel with another capacitor of 80 pF to this charge plate to ground. Thus, the total capacitance of this set of parallel capacitors is roughly 100 pF. We have made use of the CPM power supply as our charge source for such 100 pF capacitor. The IEC ball shaped discharge tip has been connected to ground. It is used as a discharge tip during probe contact ESD discharge testing of dissipative materials. During the test, the sheet or layer of dissipative material is placed directly on top of the charge plate and is allowed to charge. The CT-1 is mounted at the discharge probe ground wire. The 100 pF capacitor is always charged positively. Therefore, the mobile charges, in this case being the electrons, would be moving from the tip through the layer of dissipative material towards the capacitor. A schematic of the test configuration is shown in Figure 2. The ball shape discharge tip is chosen to prevent any mechanical puncture of the material surface under test. The EMI level generated at the instant of contact between the probe tip and dissipative material during the static discharge is very much lower [3]. Conductive Materials Scope Figure 1. Setup A Schematic Conductive Material Test The above simulator is not specifically designed to perform such discharge testing of dissipative materials. The discharge resistance of the dissipative path in series is much higher than the 1500 internal resistor of a standard HBM simulator. It is obvious that the discharge from the 100 pF capacitor through such extremely high resistance path is no longer a HBM simulation in its normal context. We have also found that our simulator could generate a very low level high frequency EMI that could be picked up by the CT-1 current probe during a discharge through a high resistance path. This EMI level is now comparable to the equally low magnitude peak discharge current at the immediate onset of avalanche CT-1 Ball Shape Tip CPM 80 pF Figure 2. A Schematic Dissipative Material Test Setup The current patterns at 1000 V discharging directly to ground from both KeyTek 2000 Mini-Zap HBM simulator and the modified method with a resistor of 1500 in series with the branch discharge (tip) are shown in Figure 3a & 3b. The 1500 resistor of the latter is to facilitate an identical discharge network of a standard HBM simulator. Both discharge current patterns are quite similar. tip to the pre-charged 100 pF capacitor. This was also to provide better control on a more consistent material spot that would be under incremental ESD stress. Finally we had also made an ESD simulation study on the impact of a human wearing a dissipative glove discharging to an ESD sensitive device. In such study, we used the KeyTek 2000 HBM simulator with the IEC ball shape discharge tip. The degradation thresholds of the device under test were obtained for cases with and without the nitrile glove wrapped around this ball tip or probe. The results from such testing are provided in the following section. IV. Results 1. Conductive Material A typical current discharge pattern from an HBM ESD simulator performing a discharge at a distance of roughly 3 cm from the end of the conductive surface coated strip is shown in Figure 4. The ground wire is clamped to the strip end (Figure 1). Figure 3a. Typical Current Pattern from Discharge to Ground of KeyTek 2000 at 1000 V Figure 4. 2000 V HBM Discharge Current Pattern across 3 cm Distant of Carbon Coated Conductive Surface Figure 3b. Typical Current Pattern from Discharge to Ground by Our Designed Simulator at 1000 V Note that for current below 10 mA and pulse width below 10 nS, we are beyond the resolution and the trigger threshold for our portable digital oscilloscope to capture such a low magnitude, fast pulse. During the characterization on the dissipative glove materials, the sample arrangement had to be modified. During this test, a glove material was first wrapped around the ball shape discharge tip. The discharge test was conducted by touching such glove wrapped As shown in the captured current pattern, the peak current amplitude is about 100 mA, and the current decay time is approximately 4 S. The resistance is about 1x 105 as measured by surface resistance meter at 10 V DC driving voltage. Therefore the time constant of the discharge from a 100 pF capacitor through this equivalent resistor of 1x 105 , = RC ~ 10 S which is comparable to the current decay time. This is close to, but may be not fully identical to, the discharge current pattern of a conductive resistor. 2. Dissipative Materials We started the discharging of the 100 pF Capacitor through the layer of dissipative material beginning with 200 V and carrying on subsequent discharges with an incremental voltage step of 100 V. 2a. Static Discharge Test on Materials in Thin Flat Sheet Form We have selected 3 dissipative materials for this study. A piece of dissipative mat with its top dissipative layer of ~ 1 mm thick and its surface resistivity of ~ 2 x 108 /Sq. has been used to perform the discharge to the ground. A typical discharge pattern through the mat is given in Figure 5a. Note that the current pulse is extremely short in the order around 100 nS or below. There exist oscillations and ringing in the current decay. When a 1500 resistor is connected in series to the ground wire of the ball discharge tip, such current oscillations in decay tail have disappeared (Figure 5b). The 1500 may have either suppressed such oscillations from being reflected within the ground wire or raised the resistance in the discharge path resulting in smoother decay. Figure 5b. Through Dissipative Mat: Discharge Current Pattern at 5500 V with 1500 added in series to Ground However, bearing in mind the non-ohmic behavior in this high voltage range, we could not use a single value Req to denote the current decay behavior. The actual value could be very much underestimated in such a simplified model. A plot of the maximum current peaks against the discharge voltages for this material is given in Figure 6. From the plot, we could derive that the initialization or on-set of impact ionization breakdown conduction mechanism to take place around 1600 V. If we define the DC resistance at a specific applied voltage as V/I, by taking the discharge voltage V = 5500 V and I ~ 300 mA, the apparent DC resistance at 5500 V works out to be about ~ 18,000 . Peak Current Versus Discharge Voltage of Dissipative Table Mat 350 300 I (mA) 250 200 150 100 Figure 5a. Through 1mm thick Dissipative Mat: Discharge Current Pattern at 5500 V If one were to model the charge decay constant = Req C and if one were to take ~ 100 nS, with C = 100 pF, one would work out the Req to be approximately 100 nS / 100 pF = 1000 . This simplified model would predict the equivalent resistance along the thin discharge path of ~ 1 mm to be around the order of 1000 or lesser. 50 0 0 1000 2000 3000 4000 V (Volts) 5000 6000 Figure 6. Peak Current Versus Discharge Voltage A typical current discharge pattern for a dissipative sheet sample made from PermaStat compound 1800 Ext is shown in Figure 7. Its thickness and its surface resistivity are 0.5 mm and ~ 6 x 109 /Sq respectively. The corresponding maximum peak 250 200 I (mA) current versus the discharge voltage is shown in Figure 8. Another PermaStat compound, 1000A, has also been tested. This also has a similar discharge current pattern and its maximum peak current versus the discharge voltage is provided in Figure 9. It has a thickness of 0.54 mm and a surface resistivity around ~ 7 x 109 /Sq. 150 100 50 0 0 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 6000 V (volts) Figure 9. PermaStat 1000: Peak Current Versus Discharge Voltage 2b. Glove Materials For the first test, we selected one commercial type of cleanroom nitrile dissipative glove for this study. This glove had an un-stretched thickness around 0.15 ~ 0.17 mm. The resistance of the glove in actual use has been determined to be around ~108 . This is done by a user placing and holding each 5 lb weight electrode of the Surface Resistance Meter in each palm. Only one hand would be wearing the glove, and the other hand is bare during such measurement with the meter. For a glove, a typical pattern captured is provided in Figure 10. Figure 7. PermaStat 1800 Ext: Current Pattern at 5600 V Discharge 160 140 I (mA) 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 0 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 6000 V (volts) Figure 8. PermaStat 1800 Ext: Peak Current Versus Discharge Voltage We did not see any visible mark of fusion or damage at the discharge contact spot on the surface of the material after being subjected to the highest voltage discharge tests for all three types of samples. No attempt was made to proceed with further investigation on the potential change of material at micro-structural level. Again, the nonlinear resistance as a function of discharge voltage is noted. Figure 10. Nitrile Glove: 3000 V Discharge Pattern After the high voltage discharge, there existed a fused spot on the discharge contact surface area of the glove material, but there was no visible punctured hole found at the fused spot under optical microscope examination. Figure 12. Some pink color dissipative finger cots were also tested. In this case, the breakdown threshold voltage could be initiated at voltages as low as 500 V, and the material could rupture near 1000 V. 1200 1000 I (mA) 800 3. ESD Simulation through Dissipative Glove onto ESDS Device – Human Dissipative Glove Model (HDGM) Test 600 400 200 0 0 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 V (volts) Figure 11. Stretched Nitrile Glove: Peak Current Versus Discharge Voltage A typical maximum peak discharge current versus the discharge voltage for the nitrile glove material is shown in Figure 11. The glove had been stretched a bit when it is wrapped around the ball shaped tip for the discharge test. It has been observed that the material further thinned out at the discharge contact area after going through the 4000 V electrostatic discharge test. Again, we did not find any sign of rupture on such contact area under optical microscope examination. This is further supported by the fact that the discharge current pattern could not be detectable when the discharge voltage was reduced below ~1000 V level again. Figure 12. Red Dissipative Glove: 100 V Discharge Pattern In another case, a red color glove with a thickness around ~ 0.1 mm and resistance in use of ~ 6 x 106 had gone through the similar discharge test. This glove material was ruptured at voltages as low as 185 V. A typical discharge current pattern is shown in We have made a study to evaluate the incremental tolerance margin one would enjoy with respect to HBM ESD if cleanroom nitrile gloves were to be used for persons handling ESD sensitive devices. We choose a type of oxide VSCEL laser diode to conduct this ESD simulation study. In this study, we also used the IEC ball shape discharge probe with the nitrile glove material wrapped around the tip. The simulator was, again, the KeyTek 2000 MiniZap. We first used the ball shape discharge tip to perform the HBM ESD simulation of the oxide VSCEL laser diode device. This laser device had been found to consistently fail at roughly 350 V. We then performed a series of similar ESD simulations through the nitrile glove layer onto good laser diode devices. The simulation was done with incremental voltage steps of 100 V starting from an initial voltage level at 200 V until device failure. This laser device failed both electrical and optical specification at around 2800 V in this kind of test. The above test results indicated that the device’s effective failure threshold from a “gloved finger” had been greatly “increased” with respect to that of standard HBM ESD stress (standard HBM stress test being a simulation of a charged person who performs direct discharge from a bare finger to a device). In general, this also implies that ESD sensitive devices would encounter lower ESD risk from HBM discharge for voltage levels below the on-set of the high current peak by the wearing of specific glove material. For nitrile gloves under study, the lowest on-set is around 900 V. This is because below the conduction breakdown threshold of 900 V, i.e. the “on-set”, the effective material resistance is still relatively high. This in turn restricts the peak discharge current. Its magnitude is far below the actual level that could cause serious degradation or failure of the device during this form of “Human Dissipative Glove Model” (HDGM) ESD. However, after initialization, and in the regime of breakdown conduction, the device could then be exposed to higher peak pulse currents-greater in magnitude than tens of mA. At a discharge voltage around 3000 V, the peak current measured about 0.7A. This is approximately the peak current level that could cause the laser diode to degrade or to fail. V. 2. Summary 1. For conductive materials, the non-ohmic characteristic for the type under study was not shown to be very profound. This was supported by the fact that the current time decay was ranging from 100 nS to the order of S. However, for dissipative materials with a thin conduction path around 1 mm or less, we could only capture the discharge current pulse above a certain threshold voltage range. Moreover, above such voltage thresholds, there existed a relatively strong, short decay time (< 100 nS) current pulsation -injecting through the thin layer of the materials. A summary of such thresholds for a few dissipative materials examined under the present study is given in Table 1 below. Table 1 Material Type Dissipative Mat PromaStat 1000A PromaStat 1800 Nitrile Glove (unstretched) Red Glove Pink Finger Cot Thickness Resistance (at 100 V) ~ 1 mm ~ 0.54 mm ~ 0.5 mm 0.15~0.17 mm ~ 2 x 108 ~ 7 x 109 ~ 6 x 109 ~ 1 x 108 Discharge (>10 mA) Threshold ~ 1700 V ~ 1600 V 1300 ~1500 V 1000 ~ 1200 V 0.1 mm - ~ 6 x 106 - < 100 V ~ 500 V 3. One type of red dissipative/conductive glove could be easily ruptured by a discharge in the range of 185 V. 4. Because of the use of the dissipative nitrile gloves, a VSCEL laser diode with a normal HBM failure threshold of 350 V demonstrated enhancement to about the 2800 V level. This is in the context of direct human static discharge through the glove layer to this device. In the case of a human wearing dissipative gloves, one may actually not be facing the normal HBM ESD scenario. Instead, it could be a Human Dissipative Glove Model or HDGM in effect. VI. Conclusion The electrostatic discharge simulation method, as a test employed for determining devices’ and products’ ESD susceptibility, could also be very useful for dissipative material characterization to determine effectiveness as a means of providing a slow, safe discharge path. This test method has been demonstrated to be fairly precise in the determination of the effective working range for dissipative materials to act as a slow, safe draining channel for charge accumulation. Furthermore, we have shown that the method offers an improved method for the selection of better dissipative glove and finger cots not only just in terms of better ESD performance in HDGM context, but also in their thermal mechanical performance. This study also suggests that the risk for sensitive devices can be reduced within an extended voltage range under the HDGM scenario -if the gloves have been properly evaluated by the electrostatic discharge test method. We wish to propose further applications of the above pulse test method beyond traditional simulation test domains with devices and products. One could actually extend the study into extensive evaluations of any resistor intended for use in critical circuitry at the sub-assembly and or at the printed circuit board level on a product. For instance, a resistor may need to be connected in series with an ESD sensitive device to ground for better ESD immunity [9]. An ESD simulation test could provide better assurance in selecting a proper type of series resistor with minimum, non-ohmic performance over a wide voltage range. A product’s effective resistance range, as designed for the enhanced ESD protection, could also be better qualified through such simulation before the products are released for manufacturing. Acknowledgements The authors wish to thank Finisar management for their support of this work. The authors would also like to express their appreciation to RTP Company for providing material samples for this study. References [1] B. C. Yap and J. Turangan “Field Charging and FIM ESD Tests on GMR Heads in Hard Disk Assembly” EOS/ESD Symposium 2001, pp. 160 [2] A. Olney, etc. al. “A New ESD Model: The Charged Strip Model” EOS/ESD Symposium 2002, 3A.2 [3] B.C. Yap, C.R. Patton, ‘Investigation of ESD Transient EMI Causing Spurious Clock Track Read Transitions During Servo-Write” EOS/ESD Symposium 2000 pp. 233 [4] ESDA Standards: ESD STM 11.11, ANSI ESD S4.1, etc. al. [5] ESDA Standards: ANSI ESD STM 4.2 [6] B. Perry, etc. al. “Impact of Insulating ‘Conductive’ Materials on Disk Drive ESD Robustness’ EOS/ESD Symposium 2002 4A.4 [7] R. B.Rosner, “Conductive Materials for ESD Applications: An Overview” EOS/ESD Symposium 2000 2B.1.1 [8] L. V. Azaroff, J. j. Brophy, “Electronic Processes in Materials” McGraw-Hill Book Company, pp. 368 – 370 [9] R. Zeng, etc.al. “ESD Damage of GMR Sensors at head Stack Assembly” EOS/ESD Symposium 1999