Title :
Electromigration early failure void nucleation and growth phenomena in Cu and Cu(Mn) interconnects
Author :
Hauschildt, M. ; Hennesthal, C. ; Talut, G. ; Aubel, O. ; Gall, M. ; Yeap, K.B. ; Zschech, E.
Author_Institution :
GLOBALFOUNDRIES Dresden Module One LLC & Co. KG, Dresden, Germany
Abstract :
Electromigration early failure void nucleation and growth phenomena were studied using large-scale, statistical analysis methods. A total of about 496,000 interconnects were tested over a wide current density and temperature range (j = 3.4 to 41.2 mA/μm2, T = 200 to 350°C) to analyze the detailed behavior of the current density exponent n and the activation energy Ea. The results for the critical V1M1 downstream interface indicate a reduction from n = 1.55±0.10 to n = 1.15±0.15 when lowering the temperature towards 200°C for Cu-based interconnects. This suggests that the electromigration downstream early failure mechanism is shifting from a mix of nucleation-controlled (n = 2) and growth-controlled (n = 1) to a fully growth-controlled mode, assisted by the increased thermal stress at lower temperatures (especially at use conditions). For Cu(Mn)-based interconnects, a drop from n = 2.00±0.07 to n = 1.64±0.2 was found, indicating additional effects of a superimposed incubation time. Furthermore, at lower current densities, the Ea value seems to drop for both Cu and Cu(Mn) interconnects by a slight, but significant amount of 0.1 - 0.2eV. Implications for extrapolations of accelerated test data to use conditions are discussed. Furthermore, the scaling behavior of the early failure population at the NSD=-3 level (F~0.1%) was analyzed, spanning 90, 65, 45, 40 and 28 nm technology nodes.
Keywords :
copper; copper compounds; current density; electromigration; failure analysis; interconnections; life testing; nucleation; statistical analysis; thermal stresses; voids (solid); Cu; CuMn; accelerated test data; activation energy; critical V1M1 downstream interface; current density exponent behavior; electromigration downstream early failure mechanism; electromigration early failure void nucleation; fully growth-controlled mode; growth phenomena; large-scale statistical analysis methods; nucleation-controlled mode; temperature 200 degC to 350 degC; thermal stress; Current density; Extrapolation; Metals; Stress; Temperature distribution; Testing; Thermal stresses; Activation Energy; Current Density Exponent; Early Failure; Electromigration; Large-Scale Statistics; Void Growth; Void Nucleation;
Conference_Titel :
Reliability Physics Symposium (IRPS), 2013 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
Anaheim, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-0112-8
Electronic_ISBN :
1541-7026
DOI :
10.1109/IRPS.2013.6531951