Title :
The statistical dependence of oxide failure rates on Vdd and tox variations, with applications to process design, circuit design, and end use
Author :
Hunter, William R.
Author_Institution :
Silicon Technol. Dev., Texas Instrum. Inc., Dallas, TX, USA
Abstract :
We describe here a new methodology which demonstrates the power of understanding the statistical dependence of the average failure rate (AFR) from dielectric wearout on statistical variations of the oxide electric field (Eox) arising from statistical variations of the power supply voltage (Vdd) and oxide thickness (tox ). It has quantitative applications to process flow design, manufacturing, circuit design, and end use. For process flow designers, it allows about 4 Å thinner gate oxide for the 1.8 V example technology studied here, compared to a simpler worst-case corner approach at maximum power supply voltage Vdd and minimum t ox. This reduction in oxide thickness enables improved device and circuit performance. For manufacturing, it also shows that tighter control of oxide thickness would be unwarranted for the specific example given here. For circuit designers, it allows transient overshoot voltages which can be about 10% higher than those based on a worst-case corner field. For end users pushing the performance envelope, it provides understanding of the trade-offs between reliability and power supply parameters
Keywords :
dielectric thin films; electric fields; failure analysis; integrated circuit design; integrated circuit manufacture; integrated circuit reliability; statistical analysis; SiO2-Si; average failure rate; circuit design; circuit performance; device performance; dielectric wearout; gate oxide; manufacturing; oxide electric field; oxide thickness; power supply parameters; power supply voltage; process design; process flow design; reliability; statistical oxide failure rate dependence; statistical variations; transient overshoot voltages; Circuits; Dielectric breakdown; Electric breakdown; Life testing; Statistical analysis; Tail; Temperature dependence; Transient analysis; Voltage; Weibull distribution;
Conference_Titel :
Reliability Physics Symposium Proceedings, 1999. 37th Annual. 1999 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
San Diego, CA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-5220-3
DOI :
10.1109/RELPHY.1999.761595