Failure analysis of semiconductor devices by means of photon emission

1991 ◽  
Vol 75 (Appendix) ◽  
pp. 241-242
Author(s):  
Eiji Inuzuka
Author(s):  
I. Österreicher ◽  
S. Eckl ◽  
B. Tippelt ◽  
S. Döring ◽  
R. Prang ◽  
...  

Abstract Depending on the field of application the ICs have to meet requirements that differ strongly from product to product, although they may be manufactured with similar technologies. In this paper a study of a failure mode is presented that occurs on chips which have passed all functional tests. Small differences in current consumption depending on the state of an applied pattern (delta Iddq measurement) are analyzed, although these differences are clearly within the usual specs. The challenge to apply the existing failure analysis techniques to these new fail modes is explained. The complete analysis flow from electrical test and Global Failure Localization to visualization is shown. The failure is localized by means of photon emission microscopy, further analyzed by Atomic Force Probing, and then visualized by SEM and TEM imaging.


Author(s):  
Tomokazu Nakai

Abstract Currently many methods are available to obtain a junction profile of semiconductor devices, but the conventional methods have drawbacks, and they could be obstacles for junction profile analysis. This paper introduces an anodic wet etching-based two-dimensional junction profiling method, which is practical, efficient, and reliable for failure analysis and electrical characteristics evaluation.


Author(s):  
Sarven Ipek ◽  
David Grosjean

Abstract The application of an individual failure analysis technique rarely provides the failure mechanism. More typically, the results of numerous techniques need to be combined and considered to locate and verify the correct failure mechanism. This paper describes a particular case in which different microscopy techniques (photon emission, laser signal injection, and current imaging) gave clues to the problem, which then needed to be combined with manual probing and a thorough understanding of the circuit to locate the defect. By combining probing of that circuit block with the mapping and emission results, the authors were able to understand the photon emission spots and the laser signal injection microscopy (LSIM) signatures to be effects of the defect. It also helped them narrow down the search for the defect so that LSIM on a small part of the circuit could lead to the actual defect.


Author(s):  
Bob Wettermann

Abstract As the pitch and package sizes of semiconductor devices have shrunk and their complexity has increased, the manual methods by which the packages can be re-bumped or reballed for failure analysis have not kept up with this miniaturization. There are some changes in the types of reballing preforms used in these manual methods along with solder excavation techniques required for packages with pitches as fine as 0.3mm. This paper will describe the shortcomings of the previous methods, explain the newer methods and materials and demonstrate their robustness through yield, mechanical solder joint strength and x-ray analysis.


Author(s):  
Thierry Parrassin ◽  
Sylvain Dudit ◽  
Michel Vallet ◽  
Antoine Reverdy ◽  
Hervé Deslandes

Abstract By adding a transmission grating into the optical path of our photon emission system and after calibration, we have completed several failure analysis case studies. In some cases, additional information on the emission sites is provided, as well as understanding of the behavior of transistors that are associated to the fail site. The main application of the setup is used for finding and differentiating easily related emission spots without advance knowledge in light emission mechanisms in integrated circuits.


Author(s):  
Steve Ferrier ◽  
Kevin D. Martin ◽  
Donald Schulte

Abstract Application of a formal Failure Analysis metaprocess to a stubborn yield loss problem provided a framework that ultimately facilitated a solution. Absence of results from conventional failure analysis techniques such as PEM (Photon Emission Microscopy) and liquid crystal microthermography frustrated early attempts to analyze this low-level supply leakage failure mode. Subsequently, a reorganized analysis team attacked the problem using a specific toplevel metaprocess.(1,a) Using the metaprocess, analysts generated a specific unique step-by-step analysis process in real time. Along the way, this approach encouraged the creative identification of secondary failure effects that provided repeated breakthroughs in the analysis flow. Analysis proceeded steadily toward the failure cause in spite of its character as a three-way interaction among factors in the IC design, mask generation, and wafer manufacturing processes. The metaprocess also provided the formal structure that, at the conclusion of the analysis, permitted a one-sheet summary of the failure's cause-effect relationships and the analysis flow leading to discovery of the anomaly. As with every application of this metaprocess, the resulting analysis flow simply represented an effective version of good failure analysis. The formal and flexible codification of the analysis decision-making process, however, provided several specific benefits, not least of which was the ability to proceed with high confidence that the problem could and would be solved. This paper describes the application of the metaprocess, and also the key measurements and causeeffect relationships in the analysis.


Author(s):  
Charles Zhang ◽  
Matt Thayer ◽  
Lowell Herlinger ◽  
Greg Dabney ◽  
Manuel Gonzalez

Abstract A number of backside analysis techniques rely on the successful use of optical beams in performing backside fault isolation. In this paper, the authors have investigated the influence of the 1340 nm and 1064 nm laser wavelength on advanced CMOS transistor performance.


Author(s):  
Mehrdad Mahanpour ◽  
Andy Gray ◽  
Jose Hulog ◽  
Pat Chang

Abstract C4 (Controlled Collapse Chip Connection) failure analysis compared to conventional packages (DIP- LCC- QFP, etc.) is not trivial. For instance, one has to thin the C4 die for IR microscope inspection or for photon emission analysis. Then, after failure analysis on the die, it must be removed for deprocessing or further analysis. Three methods and techniques will be discussed for removing the C4 die from the package without damaging the die. However, for each technique it is very important to know the condition of the die and package prior to die removal. The method used will differ, for example, if the die is thinned or not.


1998 ◽  
Vol 523 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hong Zhang

AbstractApplication of transmission electron microscopy on sub-half micron devices has been illustrated in terms of process evaluation and failure analysis. For process evaluation, it is emphasized that a large number of features need to be examined in order to have reliable conclusions about the processes, while for failure analysis, the goal is to pin-point a single process step causing failure or a single source introducing the particle defect.


2015 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 205-212 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giovanni Breglio ◽  
Andrea Irace ◽  
Luca Maresca ◽  
Michele Riccio ◽  
Gianpaolo Romano ◽  
...  

The aim of this paper is to give a presentation of the principal applications of Infrared Thermography for analysis and testing of electrondevices. Even though experimental characterization could be carried out on almost any electronic devices and circuits, here IR Thermography for investigation of power semiconductor devices is presented. Different examples of functional and failure analysis in both transient and lock-in modes will be reported.


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