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Title: ManUfacturability, Test, and Diagnostics for Microelectronics


1
ManUfacturability, Test, and Diagnostics for
Microelectronics
  • Summer Semester 2008Dr. Bernd KoenemannProf.
    Dr. Walter Anheier

2
Overall Context
3
Whats the Problem?
Perfectby design ???
Lost inTranslation
Defects !!!
4
Layout
  • The logic and/or analog design structures must be
    translated into geometrical shapes and layers for
    mask making

5
CMOS NAND-Gate
Source D. Pan, University of Texas
6
Full Custom Design Style
Source D. Pan, University of Texas
7
Standard Cell Design Style
Source D. Pan, University of Texas
8
Gate Array Design Style
VDD
Metal1
Metal2
Structured ASICs (hot topics nowadays) are
essentially gate array
Source D. Pan, University of Texas
9
FPGA Design Style
Source D. Pan, University of Texas
10
Scaling Roadmap
Source ITRS 2001
11
Metal Stack
12
Defect Types and Potential Sources
Static
Environmental (Vdd, T, PLL, SEU)Coupling Noise,
Signal IntegrityHotE, Electromigration, Negative
Bias Threshold Instability (NBTI)
? Particle and otherSingle Event Upsets (SEU)
Dynamic
From R.Puri, IBM
13
Spot Defects Particles
  • Caused by dirt/impurities, and/or
    equipment/material problems
  • E.g., particle contamination causes a short
  • May be visible to in-line inspection tools
  • Can be characterized by test structures
  • Create catastrophic or parametric defects
  • Area-sensitive (critical area)

From Skumanich and Ryabova, ASMC 2002
14
Critical Area Concept
  • Area into which defect center must fall to create
  • Shorts for additive material, opens for
    subtractive material

CA for additive material
CA for subtractive material
15
Critical Area Example
From Christie, P. de Gyvez
16
Critical Area and Yield
  • Particle-size distribution and defect types must
    be taken into account
  • Monte-Carlo simulation
  • Analytical methods

Layout Defect Sensitivity
Probability of Failure
0.35
1.2
0.3
1
0.25
0.8
0.2
Sensitivity
0.6
pdf
0.15
0.1
0.4
0.05
0.2
0
0
1
3
5
7
9
11
13
15
17
19
1
4
7
1
4
0.4
0.7
1.3
1.6
1.9
2.2
2.5
2.8
3.1
3.4
3.7
10
13
16
19
22
25
28
31
34
37
40
Defect size (10um)
Defect size
Defect size
From Christie, P. de Gyvez
17
Feature-Based Yield
Particle Defect-driven vs. Feature-driven
Yield Failure to form features replaces particle
defects as the problem
100
Traditional defect-limitedyield
90
Product yield
80
70
60
0.8?m
0.5?m
0.35?m
0.25?m
.18?m
.13?m
90nm
From PDF Solutions
18
Sub-Wavelength Lithography
Lithography
Lithography
365nm
365nm
Wavelength
Wavelength
248nm
248nm
193nm
193nm
180nm
180nm
130nm
130nm
90nm
90nm
65nm
65nm
FeatureSize
45nm
45nm
32nm
32nm
13nm
13nm
EUV
EUV
1980
1990
2000
2010
2020
Source Borkar et al., GVLSI 2002 Grobman, DAC
2001
19
Photo Lithography
20
Photo Lithographic Process
Source D. Pan, University of Texas
21
Printing Effects
Source Synopsys
22
Optical Proximity Effects
  • Optical Proximity Correction (OPC) mitigates
    problem but is very complex


Original Layout 0.18 mm
Silicon Image
Image from Pati, DAC99
23
Layout vs. Post-OPC Silicon Shapes
  • Affects performance, checking, parasitics/extracti
    on

From Rencher and Schellenberg, EE Design, 2003
24
OPE/OPC Example
Image from B. Cory
25
Impact of OPE/OPC
  • Affects transistor performance, matching, and
    extraction
  • Is the major deterministic source of device
    variability, e.g.,
  • Gate length variation
  • Line end pullback
  • Widening/Thinning, etc.
  • Complicates performance estimation/bin sort yield

Source Pack et al., SPIE 2003
26
More Sources of Variability
Causes Vt Variations
From Borkar et al., GVLSI 2002 Grobman, DAC 2001
27
Metallization Issues
Large topographical variation caused by soft pad
and mechanical properties
IsolatedTransistor
Dense Array
CMP,SOG
Contact Overetch causes leakage
RIE
Etc.
Source R. Pack, Cadence
28
More Lithography Issues
Source Mentor Graphics, DAC 2004
29
Complexity Defocus
Lens
Distance from lens
Image derived from R. Pack
30
Impact of Defocus
31
Complexity Aberration
From R. Pack
32
Complexity Context Sensitivity
Source Pack et al., SPIE 2003
33
Etc.
  • Overall static variability is on the rise

From S. Nassif, ISPD 2004
34
Impact of Static Variability
1.4
1.3
30
Frequency 30 Leakage Power 5-10X
1.2
130nm
Normalized Frequency
1000 samples
1.1
1.0
0.9
1
2
3
4
5
Normalized Leakage (
Isb
)
From Borkar et al., GVLSI 2002
35
Dynamic Variability
  • Voltage
  • Activity change
  • Power deliveryRLC
  • Dynamicns to 10-100 uSec
  • Within die
  • Temperature
  • Change in activity and ambient
  • Dynamic 100s of uSec to mSec
  • Within die

36
Temperature Profile Example
  • Varies spatially and with time (switching
    activity)

From C. Visweswariah, IBM
37
Impact of Temperature Variability
S
S
1
1
2
2
3
3
4
4
5
5
6
6
7
7
From S.A. Bota, et al., ITC2004
38
A Chip at Work
39
Impact of IR Drop and Power Supply Noise
  • Normalized circuit delay (simulated)

w/ supply noise
w/ IR drop
w/o supply noise
From Y.M. Jiang and K.T. Cheng, UCSB
40
What Does That Mean?
  • Yield limiters may buried inside the product
    design
  • Very context-sensitive and design specific
  • Non-visual and not represented in test vehicles

WorstCaseSpec
StatisticalSpec
EDAModel
Probability
Parameter
41
The New Role of Test
  • Test may be the first real opportunity to uncover
    the statistical impact of new catastrophic and
    parametric defect sources
  • Test can become a key tool for statistical design
    verification and design/yield learning

42
Our Agenda for the Semester
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