Embedded SRAM Bitmapping and Failure Analysis for Manufacturing Yield Improvement

Author(s):  
Jean-Yves Glacet ◽  
Fourmun Lee

Abstract SRAM bitmapping and failure analysis have been used as a driver for continuous yield improvement during pre-qualification manufacturing of a microcontroller. The combination of the embedded SRAM electrical failure data and failure analysis results was used to generate a pareto of failure modes and failure mechanisms and establish a correlation between the two. Bitmap trend charts can be used as a manufacturing line monitoring tool to supplement traditional in-line inspection. Identification of manufacturing issues can be obtained from bit failure information and compared with in-line inspection results to quickly identify which specific process module is responsible for a significant yield loss.

Author(s):  
Hoang-Yen To ◽  
Dat Nguyen ◽  
Clyde Dunn ◽  
Detric Davis

Abstract The flash considered for failure analysis in this paper is a non volatile memory with a NOR architecture in the array and a stacked gate for the bit cell. The flash failure was from data gain reported from various stages and at different temperatures after leaving the wafer fabrication. The failure can be single bit failure (SBF) or multiple bit failure (MBF). The FA process is comprised of two steps termed electrical failure analysis (EFA) and physical failure analysis (PFA). This paper discusses the method to differentiate failure modes and the efforts of fault isolation. Micro probing and nano probe characterization were important in the understanding of the failure mechanism. As seen in the EFA/PFA section, the reported SBF/MBF failures were actually due to a defect in the Mux and not at the bit cell.


Author(s):  
Zhigang Song ◽  
Oliver D. Patterson ◽  
Qian Xu

Abstract Process defects, either random or systematic, are often the top killers of any semiconductor device. Process defect learning and reduction are the main focuses in both technology development stage and product manufacturing yield ramp stage. In order to achieve fast defect learning, in-line defect inspection is implemented in critical layers during wafer manufacturing. In-line defect inspection is able to detect defects. However, in-line defect inspection alone cannot predict the impact of defects on device functional yield. Failure analysis is an effective method of finding the defects which really cause device functional failures. However, often, the defects found by failure analysis are very different from the original defects, making it difficult to understand the root cause. This paper will describe a methodology how to combine in-line defect inspection and failure analysis together to found the top killer defects and accelerate their root cause identification for fast defect learning and yield improvement.


Author(s):  
Hung-Sung Lin ◽  
Wen-Tung Chang ◽  
Chia-Hsing Chao ◽  
Jesse Wang ◽  
Chang-Tan Lin ◽  
...  

Abstract Single column failure [1], one of the complex failure modes in SRAM is possibly induced by multiform defect types at diverse locations. Especially, soft single column failure is of great complexity. As physical failure analysis (PFA) is expensive and time-consuming, thorough electrical failure analysis (EFA) is needed to precisely localize the failing area to greater precision before PFA. The methodology involves testing for failure mode validation, understanding the circuit and using EFA tools such as IR-OBIRCH (InfraRed-Optical Beam Induced Resistance CHange) and MCT (MerCad Telluride, HgCdTe) for analysis. However, the electrical failure signature for soft single column failure is usually marginal, so additional techniques are needed to obtain accurate isolation and electrical characterization instead of blindly looking around. Thus in this discussion, we will also present the use of internal probing techniques like C-AFM [2] (Conductive Atomic Force Microscopy) and a nanoprobing technique [3] for characterizing electrical properties and understanding the root cause.


Author(s):  
Patrick G. Opdahl

Abstract Electrical fault isolation constitutes the first steps in characterizing and isolating the failure modes and root causes of a failing motherboard. Ideally the Failure Analysis Test tools provide complete coverage of all motherboard buses and silicon devices. Time and resource constraints for tool development prevent complete coverage, however, so the challenge is to provide the highest level of debug test coverage in the shortest development schedule. A simplified Fault Isolation process has been created based on historical failure analysis data to reduce the development time and resources to create tools which allow diagnosing failure root causes on high-end server motherboards. This strategy prioritizes the most common types of electrical failure modes and the types of Electrical Failure Analysis / Fault Isolation (EFA-FI) tools best suited to diagnose these modes. The benefits of this strategy include shorter EFA-FI development times, equivalent success rates in failure root cause, lower costs, and more effective EFA-FI tools that can be used within the Design Team and at either OEM or Contract Manufacturing sites.


Author(s):  
Erick Kim ◽  
Kamjou Mansour ◽  
Gil Garteiz ◽  
Javeck Verdugo ◽  
Ryan Ross ◽  
...  

Abstract This paper presents the failure analysis on a 1.5m flex harness for a space flight instrument that exhibited two failure modes: global isolation resistances between all adjacent traces measured tens of milliohm and lower resistance on the order of 1 kiloohm was observed on several pins. It shows a novel method using a temperature controlled air stream while monitoring isolation resistance to identify a general area of interest of a low isolation resistance failure. The paper explains how isolation resistance measurements were taken and details the steps taken in both destructive and non-destructive analyses. In theory, infrared hotspot could have been completed along the length of the flex harness to locate the failure site. However, with a field of view of approximately 5 x 5 cm, this technique would have been time prohibitive.


Author(s):  
P. Schwindenhammer ◽  
H. Murray ◽  
P. Descamps ◽  
P. Poirier

Abstract Decapsulation of complex semiconductor packages for failure analysis is enhanced by laser ablation. If lasers are potentially dangerous for Integrated Circuits (IC) surface they also generate a thermal elevation of the package during the ablation process. During measurement of this temperature it was observed another and unexpected electrical phenomenon in the IC induced by laser. It is demonstrated that this new phenomenon is not thermally induced and occurs under certain ablation conditions.


Author(s):  
George M. Wenger ◽  
Richard J. Coyle ◽  
Patrick P. Solan ◽  
John K. Dorey ◽  
Courtney V. Dodd ◽  
...  

Abstract A common pad finish on area array (BGA or CSP) packages and printed wiring board (PWB) substrates is Ni/Au, using either electrolytic or electroless deposition processes. Although both Ni/Au processes provide flat, solderable surface finishes, there are an increasing number of applications of the electroless nickel/immersion gold (ENi/IAu) surface finish in response to requirements for increased density and electrical performance. This increasing usage continues despite mounting evidence that Ni/Au causes or contributes to catastrophic, brittle, interfacial solder joint fractures. These brittle, interfacial fractures occur early in service or can be generated under a variety of laboratory testing conditions including thermal cycling (premature failures), isothermal aging (high temperature storage), and mechanical testing. There are major initiatives by electronics industry consortia as well as research by individual companies to eliminate these fracture phenomena. Despite these efforts, interfacial fractures associated with Ni/Au surface finishes continue to be reported and specific failure mechanisms and root cause of these failures remains under investigation. Failure analysis techniques and methodologies are crucial to advancing the understanding of these phenomena. In this study, the scope of the fracture problem is illustrated using three failure analysis case studies of brittle interfacial fractures in area array solder interconnects. Two distinct failure modes are associated with Ni/Au surface finishes. In both modes, the fracture surfaces appear to be relatively flat with little evidence of plastic deformation. Detailed metallography, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), energy dispersive x-ray analysis (EDX), and an understanding of the metallurgy of the soldering reaction are required to avoid misinterpreting the failure modes.


Author(s):  
Rommel Estores ◽  
Pascal Vercruysse ◽  
Karl Villareal ◽  
Eric Barbian ◽  
Ralph Sanchez ◽  
...  

Abstract The failure analysis community working on highly integrated mixed signal circuitry is entering an era where simultaneously System-On-Chip technologies, denser metallization schemes, on-chip dissipation techniques and intelligent packages are being introduced. These innovations bring a great deal of defect accessibility challenges to the failure analyst. To contend in this era while aiming for higher efficiency and effectiveness, the failure analysis environment must undergo a disruptive evolution. The success or failure of an analysis will be determined by the careful selection of tools, data and techniques in the applied analysis flow. A comprehensive approach is required where hardware, software, data analysis, traditional FA techniques and expertise are complementary combined [1]. This document demonstrates this through the incorporation of advanced scan diagnosis methods in the overall analysis flow for digital functionality failures and supporting the enhanced failure analysis methodology. For the testing and diagnosis of the presented cases, compact but powerful scan test FA Lab hardware with its diagnosis software was used [2]. It can therefore easily be combined with the traditional FA techniques to provide stimulus for dynamic fault localizations [3]. The system combines scan chain information, failure data and layout information into one viewing environment which provides real analysis power for the failure analyst. Comprehensive data analysis is performed to identify failing cells/nets, provide a better overview of the failure and the interactions to isolate the fault further to a smaller area, or to analyze subtle behavior patterns to find and rationalize possible faults that are otherwise not detected. Three sample cases will be discussed in this document to demonstrate specific strengths and advantages of this enhanced FA methodology.


Author(s):  
Julie Segal ◽  
Arman Sagatelian ◽  
Bob Hodgkins ◽  
Tom Ho ◽  
Ben Chu ◽  
...  

Abstract Physical failure analysis (FA) of integrated circuit devices that fail electrical test is an important part of the yield improvement process. This article describes how the analysis of existing data from arrayed devices can be used to replace physical FA of some electrical test failures, and increase the value of physical FA results. The discussion is limited to pre-repair results. The key is to use classified bitmaps and determine which signature classification correlates to which type of in-line defect. Using this technique, physical failure mechanisms can be determined for large numbers of failures on a scale that would be unfeasible with de-processing and physical FA. If the bitmaps are classified, two-way correlation can be performed: in-line defect to bitmap failure, as well as bitmap signature to in-line defect. Results also demonstrate the value of analyzing memory devices failures, even those that can be repaired, to gain understanding of defect mechanisms.


Author(s):  
Huixian Wu ◽  
James Cargo ◽  
Huixian Wu ◽  
Marvin White

Abstract The integration of copper interconnects and low-K dielectrics will present novel failure modes and reliability issues to failure analysts. This paper discusses failure modes related to Cu/low-K technology. Here, physical failure analysis (FA) techniques including deprocessing and cross-section analysis have been developed. The deprocessing techniques include wet chemical etching, reactive ion etching, chemical mechanical polishing and a combination of these techniques. Case studies on different failure modes related to Cu/low k technology are discussed: copper voiding, copper extrusion; electromigration stress failure; dielectric cracks; delamination-interface adhesion; and FA on circuit-under-pad. For the cross-section analysis of copper/low-K samples, focused ion beam techniques have been developed. Scanning electron microscopy, EDX, and TEM analytical analysis have been used for failure analysis for Cu/low-K technology. Various failure modes and reliability issues have also been addressed.


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