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Failure Mechanisms Team Members: Noah Boydston Kyle Brown Robert Colville Linsy Cook Wissam Khazem GeeHyun Park Failure Mechanisms IC’s have many subtle flaws that dispose them towards failure Engineers typically have two tools to minimize IC failure - Operation under extremely stressful conditions to test them - Rearranging or improving circuit layout for more robust circuit Electrical Overstress Very general type of IC failure of which there are 3 primary subtypes -Electrostatic Discharge (ESD) - Electromigration - Antenna effect Electrostatic Discharge When two substances are separated an ES charge develops Caused by the removal of electrons from surface atoms of materials Factors • Magnitude of static charge • Intimacy of contact • Rate of separation Electrostatic Discharge Failures – catastrophic • Most hard damage to semiconductors occurs below human sensitivity around 4000V • 2 primary hard failure types • voltage punch through – CMOS and MOS with very thin oxide dielectric layers • P-N junction degradation – bipolar circuits excessive power dissipation Electrostatic Discharge Failures – noncatastrophic / intermittent upset • Degradation • Increased leakage current • Lower breakdown voltages of P-N junctions • Softening of the knee of V-I curve of a P-N junction • Decreased dielectric constant • Problems may not occur until later with additional stresses • Intermittent upset – no hard damage, but results in data loss or noise Electrostatic Discharge Failure Modes • Thermal Secondary breakdown – high power, small junction causes junction melting • Metallization Melt – ESD causes the metal to melt and bond wires to fuse, usually causes and open circuit • Dielectric Breakdown – high potential difference across a dielectric region cause a punch through • Bulk Breakdown – changes in junction parameters caused by excessive temperature at the junction Electrostatic Discharge Resistor Susceptibility to ESD Current 1.5k • Human Body Test Model Lim iting Resistor • Simulates a charged Test Capacitor Voltage Source Device 100-150pF person or object that 0-1.5kV DC comes into contact with Human Body Test Model a device • Uses a decaying exponential waveform • Human Body Capacitance is 50 pF to 200 pF with a resistance of 1k to 5k Electrostatic Discharge Susceptibility to ESD • Charged Device model • Device is charged to between 1 to 1.5 kV • One pin is discharged to a low impedance ground Current Lim iting Resistor Voltage Source Test Device 0-1.5kV DC Low Im pedance Charged Device Model Electrostatic Discharge Barrier/Shielding Assembly Protection • RFI / EMI Design zoning • sensitive devices shielded by less sensitive parts • Faraday Shielding - conductive films or foils • Increasing the number of ground conductors in a PCB • An ESD spark is more likely to hit a rough edge than a smooth one so ground is etched with a pattern Barrier/Shielding Barrier/Shielding Zone 1 Sensitive Devices Zone 2 Moderately Sensitive Devices Zone 3 Insensitive Devices Input/Output Connections Electrostatic Discharge Assembly Protection • Grounding • Multipoint Usually a hybrid • Fishbone type of these is used. • Single point • Cabling – wiring to ESD sensitive devices Twisted pair Decreasing Shielded pair Effectiveness Plain twisted pair } Electrostatic Discharge ESD Protective Equipment • • • • • • • • • Wrist Straps connected to ground ESD protective work stations Protective packaging Protective bags Conductive foam ES detectors Conductive floors Special clothing Air Ionizers Protective Circuits to Minimize ESD Damage Connect external leads to high series resistance, shunt paths, or voltage clamps ESD protective circuits provide minimal protection often from only as much as 800 volts Such measures do not totally eliminate ESD damage but reduce it drastically More Protection Devices Use of Faraday Shielding to protect from ESD – elaborate but highly effective More Protection Devices Circuit diagram and layout of simple zener clamp More Protection Devices Circuit diagram and partial layout of two stage zener clamp More Protection Devices Buffered zener clamp Electromigration • Overview Slow wearout of metallization caused by excessive current densities Becomes a problem when current densities closely approach or exceed 500,000 A/cm2 For sub-micron width leads, this translates to currents of only a few milliamps Causes of Electromigration Impacting of electrons causes gradual shifting of Aluminum atoms from their normal lattice sites (see picture) Aluminum atoms move away from grain boundaries causing voids to form between grains Reduced area of wire increases resistance and worsens problem Voiding in Aluminum Voiding in aluminum due to electromigration Preventing Damage From Electromigration Refractory barrier metals such as W, Ti, and Mo, can prevent catastrophic migration failure When overlying Al shifts away, refractory metals remain Can be deposited by vacuum metal deposition techniques or by sputtering Sputtering is usually used because it is cheaper and more efficient Refractories are especially useful in contacts and vias where Al metallization thins New IBM Chip using only W and Cu, no Al Cross section of same IBM Chip Preventing Damage from Electromigration - Alloys Al metallization is now alloyed with 0.5% to 4.0% Cu Due to low solubility in Al, Cu accumulates at the grain boundaries and helps prevent voiding Such an alloy has 5-10 times the current carrying capacity of Al alone Other Migration Prevention Measures Rearranging leads to prevent crossing of oxide steps Heating die to smooth corners of oxide steps before Al metallization is deposited – improves Al coverage of the steps Use wider leads than normal when crossing oxide steps – leads should widen somewhat before they reach the steps Compressively stressed overcoats inhibit void formation by confining Al under pressure Other issues of importance in Electromigration Displaced Al can short adjacent leads, so using refractory metal is not a perfect solution Displaced Al can also seep into damaged dielectrics causing a short Antenna Effect • Dry Etching - Intense E-field - Accumulation of electrostatic charges Antenna Effect - Gate poly and sidewall spacers - Degradation of dielectric strength due to current Antenna Effect - Electrostatic charge proportional to area of poly - Small gates connected to large poly area can cause significant damage Antenna Effect - Poly area acts as antenna - Effect also seen during ion implantation of the source / drain regions Antenna Effect - Measurement of effect - Magnitude of effect proportional to Exposed Conductor Area Gate Oxide Area Antenna Effect - Separate area ratios computed for multiple layers - Significant damage conductor area > several hundred gate area Antenna Effect • Prevention - Etching of poly and sidewall spacers - Insert of metal jumper - Escape route for charges - Reduces area of the poly connected to gate oxide - Removed after etching or implantation Antenna Effect • Prevention - Etching of metal layers - Layers connected to diffusions provide leak path - Jumpers inserted for layers not yet connected to diffusions Contamination • Vulnerability - Proper manufacturing techniques to minimize contamination - Two major types of contamination - Dry Corrosion - Mobile Ion Contamination (Gee) Contamination As stated by the textbook…. “The aluminum metal system will corrode if exposed to ionic contaminants in the presence of moisture. Only trace amounts of water are necessary to initiate this so-called dry corrosion All modern integrated circuits are covered with a protective overcoat that acts as a secondary moisture barrier.” Contamination • Dry Corrosion Water alone cannot corrode aluminum, but many ionic substances dissolve in water to form relatively corrosive solutions. - Effects -Water alone cannot corrode aluminum - Phosphosilicate glasses - moisture phosphoric acid corrosion - Halogen Ions - Chloride - Bromide Contamination • Dry Corrosion - Preventative Measures - Design - Minimize the number and size of all PO openings - The production die should not include any unnecessary openings - Metal should overlap bondpad openings on all sides - Openings should be made as small as possible - No circuitry should appear within the opening Contamination • Prototype Design / Manufacturing - Clean Room - Cleanrooms are 10,000 times cleaner than hospital operating rooms - Equipment - Air / fluid filtration - Clothing - Can be a 43 step process Particle Removal The clothing worn covers most of the body. Particle Removal Air flows across the body to remove any foreign particles prior to entering cleanroom. There is also “self patting” of the body to knock loose any stubborn particles. Particle Removal It takes about a minute, but one must wait patiently for the particle removal process to complete Particle Removal All must be serious about maintaining a “clean” environment. Particle Removal Air is filtered and supplied to the lab through a very elaborate duct system Contamination Some stations have independent air filter systems Particle Removal The system return air is acquired though floor vents. The supply / return are both perpendicular to the room to minimize “swirling.” Contamination Fluids are filtered Contamination Tools are kept clean when not in use Contamination Materials are protected when not in use (1/2) Contamination Materials protected when not in use (2/2) Contamination The cleanroom is kept in a very orderly condition Mobile Ion description Dissolve in SiO2 at elevated temperatures Loss of mobility at normal temperatures Effect 2/2 The positive gate repels mobile sodium to oxide-silicon interface Effect 1/2 Induce parametric shift in MOS transistor at threshold voltage Long term failures slow drift of threshold voltage Temperature Solution Bake at 200°C and redistribute mobile ions Preventative Measures Purer chemicals and improve process technique Phosphor to gate oxide stabilize to improve alkali metal contaminants Dielectric Polarization Threshold shift by dielectric polarization more predictable than mobile ions Use phosphorus-doped polysilicon gate rather than gate oxides Phosphorus-doped polysilicon immobilizes alkali metals Moisture from outside package brings in sodium. This can be reduced by improving package material to slow ingress of sodium ions Protection Overcoate Silicon nitride impermeable to mobile ions Phosphorus-doped glasses It can serve as a final line of defense against impurities Minimum number of probe pads needed, and they should be kept far away from sensitive analog circuit Scribe Seals Narrow content strips surrounds active area of die and continuous ring P-type diffusion Guaranteed minimum area of substance contacts Surface Effect Surface region of high electric field intensity Surface electric field induces the formation of the parasitic channels Hot Carrier Injection Weak electric field causes an overall drift of carriers but does not materially affect their instantaneous velocity, while a strong electric field actually increases the instantaneous velocity of the carriers Effect MOS can generate hot carriers when operated in saturation region at high-drain-to-source voltages The pinched- off portion of the channel slowly grows wider, aAs the drain-to-source voltage increases The electric field becomes large to generate hot carriers near the drain end of the transistor Effect On Performance Hot carriers produced at the drain end of the transistor collide with the lattice atoms Few of the recoiling carriers travel upward into the overlying oxide Most of the carriers pass trough the oxide and return to the silicon Few get trapped at defect sites within the oxide, will represent a fix oxide charge Parametric Shift Caused by hot carriers Can be partially or completely reversed The parametric shift vanishes as the fixed oxide change dissipates Avalanche Junction It occurs near the surface in most diffused junction Some of the hot carriers produced travel into the overlying oxide The avalanche voltage slowly increases during operation (called Zener walk-out) Zener Walkout Mechanism Junction diode’s reverse break down is observed using a curve tracer Emitter-base Zeners can exhibit up to 200mV of walk-out Preventative Measures1/2 Lightly Doped Drain (LDD) structure Redesign the circuit Transistor – Used as a switch – Fully on in witch they are in linear region – Fully off in witch they are in cutoff region – They can withstand voltages far beyond the onset of the hot carrier Preventative Measures2/2 Long channel devices – Vicinity of the drain Produce the hot carrier – The rest of the channels remains unaffected – Increasing the channel length by a few micro far a few extra volts Base-emitter Zener diode Special Appearance by: Carlos, Corey, Eric, and Fariba