Title :
Analysis of a Passive Sensor for Predicting Process-Induced Stress in Advanced Integrated Circuit Interconnect
Author :
Gallacher, Barry J. ; Neill, Anthony G O ; Bull, Steve J. ; Wilson, Christopher J. ; Horsfall, Alton B.
Author_Institution :
Newcastle Univ., Newcastle upon Tyne
fDate :
3/1/2008 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Process-induced stress and its deleterious effects on interconnect reliability become increasingly severe as current densities escalate at scaled geometries. Accurate and reliable measurements of stress are paramount to understand the failure mechanisms in advanced interconnect schemes, the control of process technologies, the integration of new materials, and the reliability-driven architecture design. An analytical model of a recently developed passive strain sensor that is suitable for predicting process-induced stress in advanced interconnect technology is presented. This passive strain sensor is scalable for future interconnect geometries predicted by the International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors. The model is developed using complementary energy principles and is compared against the available experimental data on aluminum interconnect. Agreement between the model and the experiment is shown to be within 5%. The use of the developed model enables critical design parameters to be identified and optimized for any level of stress. Furthermore, as the model is scalable, it will facilitate the design of such sensors for future interconnect geometries.
Keywords :
current density; failure analysis; integrated circuit design; integrated circuit interconnections; integrated circuit reliability; strain sensors; advanced integrated circuit interconnect; advanced interconnect technology; aluminum interconnect; current densities; failure mechanisms; interconnect geometries; interconnect reliability; passive strain sensor; process technologies; process-induced stress; reliability-driven architecture design; Interconnect, reliability, strain, stress;
Journal_Title :
Device and Materials Reliability, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TDMR.2007.912272