Title :
Electrochemical processes resulting in migrated short failures in microcircuits
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electron Technol., Tech. Univ. Budapest, Hungary
fDate :
9/1/1995 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Metals can exhibit dendritic short-circuits caused by electrochemical migration in conductor-insulator structures, which may result in failures and reliability problems in microcircuits. The classical model of electrochemical migration has been well known for several decades. This process is a transport of metal ions between two metallization stripes under bias through a continuous aqueous electrolyte. Due to the electrodeposition at the cathode, dendrites and dendrite-like deposits are formed. Ultimately, such a deposit can lead to a short circuit in the device and can clause catastrophic failure. A few anomalous and newly discovered phenomena have initiated us to perform some revisions and to add supplementary models to the conventional one. A theoretical review based on practical results is given about the most important possible processes. Material design aspects are also discussed
Keywords :
dendrites; electrochemistry; electrodeposition; electromigration; failure analysis; integrated circuit metallisation; integrated circuit reliability; semiconductor process modelling; short-circuit currents; catastrophic failure; conductor-insulator structures; dendritic short-circuits; electrochemical migration; electrodeposition; metallization; microcircuits; reliability; Cathodes; Conducting materials; Electrochemical processes; Integrated circuit interconnections; Integrated circuit reliability; Metallization; Multichip modules; Process design; Production systems; Strips;
Journal_Title :
Components, Packaging, and Manufacturing Technology, Part A, IEEE Transactions on