Title :
Maximizing heat dissipation for burn-in testing
Author :
Sagahyroon, Assim A.
Author_Institution :
California State Univ., USA
Abstract :
The correctness of a fabricated chip or integrated circuit is determined through testing. Some process defects, such as weak gate oxide, narrower interconnection metal and weak contacts, have a close relationship with the production reliability. The predominant mechanism leading to the early failure of an integrated circuit can be accelerated by operating the device or chip under test at an elevated temperature. Manufacturing burn-in testing employs this technique of subjecting the chip to high temperature stress with the purpose of screening out the early life failure to improve the quality and reliability of the manufactured chips. During burn-in testing input vectors or stress tests with the purpose of elevating the integrated circuit temperature are applied throughout the test period. Determining the vectors that would maximize heat dissipation of an integrated circuit is not a trivial problem and is NP-complete. In this paper, a genetic algorithm (GA) is used to assist in generating a sequence of input vectors that continuously tend to maximize the heat dissipated by the device under test. Variations of GA parameters were used to derive an optimal set of working parameters.
Keywords :
cooling; dielectric thin films; failure analysis; genetic algorithms; integrated circuit interconnections; integrated circuit metallisation; integrated circuit reliability; integrated circuit testing; integrated circuit yield; process heating; production testing; thermal stresses; GA parameters; accelerated early failure; burn-in testing; chip quality; chip reliability; chip screening; device under test; early failure mechanism; elevated temperature testing; genetic algorithm; high temperature stress; input test vector sequence; integrated circuit temperature; integrated circuit testing; maximized heat dissipation; narrow interconnection metal; optimal working parameter set; process defects; production reliability; stress tests; test period; weak contacts; weak gate oxide; Circuit testing; Integrated circuit interconnections; Integrated circuit reliability; Integrated circuit testing; Life estimation; Life testing; Manufacturing; Production; Stress; Temperature;
Conference_Titel :
Electrical and Computer Engineering, 2002. IEEE CCECE 2002. Canadian Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7514-9
DOI :
10.1109/CCECE.2002.1015257