DocumentCode :
2601031
Title :
Failure Mechanisms in Integrated Circuit Interconnect Systems
Author :
Selikson, Bernard
Author_Institution :
Lowell Technological Institute, Lowell, Massachusetts
fYear :
1967
fDate :
Nov. 1967
Firstpage :
201
Lastpage :
208
Abstract :
Failure mechanism in interconnect systems employed in semiconductor devices have been reviewed and analyzed in some detail1 from the early purple plague producing aluminum-gold system to the latest platinum-titanium-gold beam lead process. It is shown that intermetallic compound formation occurs in all the systems studied. In the aluminum-gold system, the formation of the purple plague compound and other intermetallics is catalyzed by the presence of silicon, causing rapid degradation of bond strength. The compound formation up over the oxide is accompanied by void formation as a result of Kirkendall effect, leading to mechanically open bonds. Compound formation is found or may be expected in all the interconnect systems analyzed. The only interconnect system free of these problems is the all aluminum system.
Keywords :
Aluminum; Bonding; Degradation; Failure analysis; Gold; Integrated circuit interconnections; Intermetallic; Metallization; Silicon; Wire;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Reliability Physics Symposium, 1967. Sixth Annual
Conference_Location :
Los Angeles, CA, USA
ISSN :
0735-0791
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/IRPS.1967.362413
Filename :
4207776
Link To Document :
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