Title :
On the failure mechanisms of titanium nitride/titanium silicide barrier contacts under high current stress
Author :
Fu, Kuan-Yu ; Pyle, Ronald E.
Author_Institution :
Motorola Inc., Austin, TX, USA
fDate :
12/1/1988 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Structures with a single pair of titanium nitride/titanium silicide barrier contacts with connecting narrow diffusion widths (⩽3.0 μm) have been investigated for their electromigration resistance and reliability performance by applying current ramping and high current stress at different temperatures. Under a current ramping, the contact structures show a decrease in contact resistance after being virtually constant in the low-current regime and a steady increase of contact resistance toward the higher-current regime due to Joule heating in the diffusion region. The transition occurs when the temperature in the diffusion region reaches a value (the critical point) above which the intrinsic carriers become a dominant for conduction, especially for the region near the p-n junction. This point is followed by an unstable region in which the contact resistance continues to reduce. As the current rises further, a catastrophic structural failure, similar to a thermally initiated second breakdown in a transistor, is observed. The magnitude of the critical current is linearly proportional to the diffusion width and is independent of the type of impurity used to dope the diffusion region
Keywords :
VLSI; failure analysis; integrated circuit technology; metallisation; ohmic contacts; semiconductor-metal boundaries; titanium compounds; 3 micron; Al-TiN-TiSi2-Si barrier contacts; MTTF; barrier contacts; catastrophic structural failure; contact resistance; contact structures; critical current; current ramping; diffusion width; electromigration resistance; failure mechanisms; failure modes; high current stress; narrow diffusion widths; reliability performance; temperatures; Contact resistance; Electromigration; Failure analysis; Joining processes; P-n junctions; Resistance heating; Silicides; Stress; Temperature; Titanium;
Journal_Title :
Electron Devices, IEEE Transactions on