Failure Analysis Using Voltage Contrast and Ebic

1998 ◽  
Vol 523 ◽  
Author(s):  
Larry Rice ◽  
Wei Chen

AbstractAs ULSI device critical dimensions continue to shrink to submicron sizes, electron microscopy techniques such as electron beam induced current (EBIC) and voltage contrast are finding more applications towards pinpointing failure sites for subsequent cross sectioning or deprocessing. In addition to the traditional use of EBIC for junction delineation, EBIC has been applied to locate leakage sites in capacitor structures and silicon-on-insulator (SOI) devices as well. Similarly, voltage contrast has been applied to identify single or multiple opens in via chains which consist of thousands of vias. In addition to a brief revisit of the basic principles of EBIC and voltage contrast, focus will be placed on the application of EBIC and voltage contrast in failure analysis of semiconductor devices. Examples of using voltage contrast combined with precision cross section focused ion beam (XFIB) for identifying the failure mechanism of 0.8μm vias will be presented. Also, the use of EBIC for identifying leakage sites in SOI and bipolar devices and subsequent FIB/scanning electron microscopy (SEM) analysis will be presented.

Author(s):  
Julien Goxe ◽  
Béatrice Vanhuffel ◽  
Marie Castignolles ◽  
Thomas Zirilli

Abstract Passive Voltage Contrast (PVC) in a Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) or a Focused Ion Beam (FIB) is a key Failure Analysis (FA) technique to highlight a leaky gate. The introduction of Silicon On Insulator (SOI) substrate in our recent automotive analog mixed-signal technology highlighted a new challenge: the Bottom Oxide (BOX) layer, by isolating the Silicon Active Area from the bulk made PVC technique less effective in finding leaky MOSFET gates. A solution involving sample preparation performed with standard FA toolset is proposed to enhance PVC on SOI substrate.


Author(s):  
Z. G. Song ◽  
S. K. Loh ◽  
X. H. Zheng ◽  
S.P. Neo ◽  
C. K. Oh

Abstract This article presents two cases to demonstrate the application of focused ion beam (FIB) circuit edit in analysis of memory failure of silicon on insulator (SOI) devices using XTEM and EDX analyses. The first case was a single bit failure of SRAM units manufactured with 90 nm technology in SOI wafer. The second case was the whole column failure with a single bit pass for a SRAM unit. From the results, it was concluded that FIB circuit edit and electrical characterization is a good methodology for further narrowing down the defective location of memory failure, especially for SOI technology, where contact-level passive voltage contrast is not suitable.


Author(s):  
Roger Alvis ◽  
Jeff Blackwood ◽  
Sang-Hoon Lee ◽  
Matthew Bray

Abstract Semiconductor devices with critical dimensions less than 20nm are now being manufactured in volume. A challenge facing the failure analysis and process-monitoring community is two-fold. The first challenge of TEM sample prep of such small devices is that the basic need to end-point on a feature-of-interest pushes the imaging limit of the instrument being used to prepare the lamella. The second challenge posed by advanced devices is to prepare an artifact-free lamella from non-planar devices such as finFETs as well as from structures incorporating ‘non-traditional’ materials. These challenges are presently overcome in many advanced logic and memory devices in the focused ion beam-based TEM sample preparation processes by inverting the specimen prior to thinning to electron transparency. This paper reports a highthroughput method for the routine preparation of artifact-free TEM lamella of 20nm thickness, or less.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Fera ◽  
Qianping He ◽  
Guofeng Zhang ◽  
Richard D. Leapman

SummaryStain density is an important parameter for optimizing the quality of ultrastructural data obtained from several types of 3D electron microscopy techniques, including serial block-face electron microscopy (SBEM), and focused ion beam scanning electron microscopy (FIB-SEM). Here, we show how some straightforward measurements in the TEM can be used to determine the stain density based on a simple expression that we derive. Numbers of stain atoms per unit volume are determined from the measured ratio of the bright-field intensities from regions of the specimen that contain both pure embedding material and the embedded biological structures of interest. The determination only requires knowledge of the section thickness, which can either be estimated from the microtome setting, or from low-dose electron tomography, and the elastic scattering cross section for the heavy atoms used to stain the specimen. The method is tested on specimens of embedded blood platelets, brain tissue, and liver tissue.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Gunawan ◽  
E. Sugiarti ◽  
Isnaeni ◽  
R. I. Purawiardi ◽  
H. Widodo ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Fritz Christian Awitan ◽  
Camille Joyce Garcia ◽  
Dirk Andrew Doyle ◽  
Lawrence Benedict

Abstract An ARC solution that can be used to improve backside imaging for backside photoemission microscopy applications is presented in this paper. Zinc Oxide (ZnO) -based thin films used as ARCs are deposited at the backside of the failing units through a simple and low cost spray pyrolysis technique. An improvised set-up, composed of an atomizer and a hot plate, is used in the experiment. The paper provides evidence of acceptable process repeatability and demonstrates that the technique and the material have important applications in the field of failure analysis. Furthermore, it shows that the application of ARC resulted in better defect localization. The location of the defect is easily been determined upon doing frontside inspection - to - backside image comparison on the deposited unit. By using high kV ion beam passive voltage contrast (PVC) and angled cut focused ion beam (FIB) cross section, we are able to isolate further and show the nature of the defect at the failing block.


Author(s):  
Liang Hong ◽  
Jia Li ◽  
Haifeng Wang

Abstract This paper provides an innovative root cause failure analysis method that combines multiple failure analysis (FA) techniques to narrow down and expose the shorting location and allow the material analysis of the shorting defect. It begins with a basic electrical testing to narrow down shorting metal layers, then utilizing mechanical lapping to expose over coat layers. This is followed by optical beam induced resistance change imaging to further narrow down the shorting location. Scanning electron microscopy and optical imaging are used together with focused ion beam milling to slice and view through the potential shorting area until the shorting defect is exposed. Finally, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) sample is prepared, and TEM analysis is carried out to pin point the root cause of the shorting. This method has been demonstrated successfully on Western Digital inter-metal layers shorting FA.


Author(s):  
Steve Wang ◽  
Frederick Duewer ◽  
Shashidar Kamath ◽  
Christopher Kelly ◽  
Alan Lyon ◽  
...  

Abstract Xradia has developed a laboratory table-top transmission x-ray microscope, TXM 54-80, that uses 5.4 keV x-ray radiation to nondestructively image buried submicron structures in integrated circuits with at better than 80 nm 2D resolution. With an integrated tomographic imaging system, a series of x-ray projections through a full IC stack, which may include tens of micrometers of silicon substrate and several layers of Cu interconnects, can be collected and reconstructed to produce a 3D image of the IC structure at 100 nm resolution, thereby allowing the user to detect, localize, and characterize buried defects without having to conduct layer by layer deprocessing and inspection that are typical of conventional destructive failure analysis. In addition to being a powerful tool for both failure analysis and IC process development, the TXM may also facilitate or supplant investigations using scanning electron microscopy (SEM), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), and focused ion beam (FIB) tools, which generally require destructive sample preparation and a vacuum environment.


Author(s):  
K. Takagi ◽  
Y. Kohno ◽  
S. Nukii

Abstract This paper describes a failure analysis that effectively combined multiple analytic techniques to find the cause of I/O leakage in a flawed chip produced for an OEM (Original Equipment Manufacturer) product. Internal probing was initially used for defect isolation and a Tungsten (W) stud open circuit flaw was isolated by electrical characterization with internal probing. SEM (Scanning Electron Microscopy), TEM (Transmission Electron Microscopy, and FE-AES (Field Emission Auger Electron Spectroscopy) analysis with FIB (Focused Ion Beam) preparation were used for physical analysis. Cross-sectional SEM and TEM observations showed a gap with foreign material (FM) between the bottom of the metal line and the top of the W stud, possibly from the W CMP (chemical mechanical polish) process. FE-AES is effective for the analysis of light materials and their chemical composition, so a flat milling FIB process was used to prepare a cross-section for FE-AES analysis of the FM and the interfaces of the open defect. The spectra showed that the FM was traceable to the W CMP process. From these analytical results and problem reproduction experiments in the W CMP process on the manufacturing line, the failure mechanism was identified.


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