DocumentCode
2605524
Title
Migratory Gold Resistive Shorts: Chemical Aspects of a Failure Mechanism
Author
Grunthaner, F.J. ; Griswold, T.W. ; Clendening, P.J.
Author_Institution
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91103
fYear
1975
fDate
27485
Firstpage
99
Lastpage
106
Abstract
Integrated-circuit devices using the Ti/W/Au metal system are subject to failure mechanisms based on electrolytic corrosion. The migratory gold resistive short (MGRS) failure mode is one example of this mechanism and results in the formation of filamentary or dendritic deposits of gold between adjacent stripes. on the IC chip. This reaction requires the presence of a sufficient amount of water, a bias voltage between adjacent stripes, and the activation of the cathodic (-) stripe. Gold ions are transported from anode to cathode through a film of moisture adsorbed on the surface of the chip; halide ions are probably involved in the transfer. Their presence is verified experimentally by x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. Some of the chemical and electrostatic factors involved in the MGRS mechanism are discussed in this paper, including the questions of a threshold level of moisture and contamination.
Keywords
Anodes; Cathodes; Chemicals; Corrosion; Failure analysis; Gold; Moisture; Spectroscopy; Surface contamination; Voltage;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Reliability Physics Symposium, 1975. 13th Annual
Conference_Location
Las Vegas, NV, USA
ISSN
0735-0791
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IRPS.1975.362682
Filename
4208063
Link To Document