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The momentum exchange between lattice atoms and conduction electrons together with the stress gradient along the metal wire embedded into the rigid confinement are two major driving forces for electromigration-induced evolution of stress and vacancy concentration. The growth of mechanical stress causes an evolution of a variety of defects that are inevitably present in the metal, leading to void formation. It affects the electrical properties of the interconnect. In order to estimate the time to failure caused by voiding, the kinetics of stress evolution should be resolved until the first void is nucleated. Then the analysis of the void size evolution should be performed in order to trace changes in resistances of individual voided lines and vias. In this chapter, we review the major results that have been achieved with the 1D phenomenological EM model. We demonstrate its capability to predict the transient and steady-state distributions of the vacancy concentration and the hydrostatic stress, a void nucleation, and its growth, and also a drift of small voids along a metal wire. Despite its simplified nature, the 1D model is capable of addressing the confinement effect of ILD/IMD dielectric on EM-induced degradation, and also the effect of metal grain structure.
A very different picture of the redistribution of metal density and stress, caused by electric stressing, can be expected in multibranch interconnect structures formed by connected metal lines within the same metal layer. The absence of diffusion barriers in line junctions allows atoms to freely migrate between lines along the trajectories of the current carriers. When a multibranch structure includes metal lines that are connected in parallel, the creation of a void in one of the parallel branches does not necessarily result in a failure, which contrasts with what happens in a single line segment, because current can continue to flow in the unvoided parallel lines. The on-chip power/ground (p/g) grid is an example of such electrically redundant multibranch structures. In this chapter, we review a recently developed assessment methodology of the p/g grid MTTF and describe a novel experimental technique that could validate the proposed methodology. EM assessment performed on the grids with tens of millions of nodes has shown that the formation of the first void alone didn’t cause a grid failure. A failure criterion of 10% voltage drop increase was met due to cumulative effect of nucleation of several voids and their growth in the failed branches.
In Chapter 5, we show that the microstructure and interfaces are important in controlling EM reliability of Cu damascene interconnects where the EM lifetime can be significantly improved with metal capping or alloying. In this chapter, we investigate the scaling effect on microstructure and the implication on EM reliability for Cu and Co damascene lines. The scaling effect on Cu microstructure was investigated using a high-resolution electron microdiffraction technique down to 22 nm linewidth for the 14 nm node. The results showed a systematic trend of microstructure evolution in Cu damascene lines with continued scaling. A Monte Carlo simulation was carried out to investigate grain growth in Cu interconnects beyond 22 nm linewidth based on total energy minimization. The simulation results enabled us to understand how the interface energy counteracts the strain and grain boundary energies to control the microstructure evolution in Cu lines with continued scaling. Then the scaling effect on microstructure evolution of Co damascene lines was investigated beyond the 10nm node using both electron microdiffraction and simulation. The simulated microstructures of Cu and Co interconnects are used to project the scaling effect on EM reliability beyond the 10 nm node.
An accurate analysis of the stress evolution in a metal line loaded with an electric current requires solution of a number of coupled partial differential equations (PDEs). The continuity equations, describing the evolution of concentrations of vacancies and plated atoms along the line, are linked with the force balance equation yielding the elastic stress evolution due to interaction of the metal line volumetric deformation with the rigid confinement. The electric current density distribution is found by solving the corresponding Laplace equation. Accounting for the polycrystalline structure of the metals used as conductors in on-chip interconnects, and proper consideration of a variety of venues for diffusion of vacancies, such as grain boundaries and interfaces with liners and capping layers, requires a comprehensive 2D or 3D analysis. Following void nucleation, which happens when the tensile stress reaches a critical value, the void shape and size are described by a combination of the Cahn–Hilliard and Allen–Kahn equations with the phase-field formalism. Detailed description of these coupled PDEs and results of their solution for a number of cases using finite element analysis (FEA) are demonstrated in this chapter. A good fit between simulation results and measurements is demonstrated throughout the chapter.
Scaling on-chip Cu wiring dimensions has degraded electromigration (EM) reliability with the same metallization and rapidly increased Cu resistivity. The size effects in EM and resistivity were caused by increased contributions from EM-induced mass flow and electron scattering with interfaces and grain boundaries, respectively. The EM Cu interconnect lifetime had further degraded by the decrease in the void volume required to cause EM failure. The Cu interconnect resistance was further increased by increasing the volume fraction of barrier/liner in metal wires that were required to produce chips with good reliability. In this chapter, we review the Cu microstructure and resistivity for various CMOS technological nodes, the basic physics of the EM phenomenon addressing EM mass transport, lifetime scaling rule, and damage formation in Cu damascene line structures. This is followed with discussions on Blech short length and EM scaling rule. Several techniques developed for improving EM reliability using upper-level dummy vias, impurities, Cu surface treatments, alternated liners, and surface metal coating are discussed together with the effects of Cu microstructure, atomic layer deposition MnOx liner, and Cu/carbon nanotube composite line on EM.Finally, the EM lifetimes, failure mechanisms and activation energies through various technological nodes are presented.
In this chapter, electromigration is formulated as a phenomenon of mass transport in metals under an electrical current driving force within the framework of irreversible thermodynamics. Based on this approach, the solute effect on electromigration is analyzed by considering the correlation in atomic jumping processes, a problem that is of interest to understand how solute addition can affect electromigration in metals. This is followed by a review of the theory of the electromigration driving force and a discussion of the controversy of the electron screening effect. This chapter is concluded by reviewing the results on substitutional and interstitial electromigration in bulk metals.
This chapter first showed how electromigration for the on-chip interconnects is distinctly different from that of bulk metals. As the microelectronics technology rapidly advances following Moore’s law, electromigration becomes a key reliability problem for on-chip interconnects. This significantly changes the characteristics of electromigration, rendering thermal stresses as equally important in controlling mass transport and damage formation in the interconnects. This led to the discovery of the Blech short-length effect, establishing the concept of a critical current density-length (jLc) product as an important reliability criterion for on-chip interconnects. In this chapter, thermal stress characteristics and stress-induced void formation in passivated Al and Cu lines are investigated. The effect of dielectric confinement on thermal stress characteristics is discussed and verified by results of X-ray diffraction measurements of passivated Al and Cu lines. Then stress relaxation in passivated Al and Cu lines is discussed and correlated to stress-induced void formation.
In the present work, LaNi0.5Ti0.5O3, LaNi0.5Ti0.45Co0.05O3, and LaNi0.45Co0.05Ti0.5O3 perovskites were synthesized using the modified Pechini method. After reduction, the studied perovskites changed crystal structure from the perovskite crystal structure to a cubic symmetry, with space group $Pm\bar{3}m$. The reduction partially decomposed the samples to Ni0 (Co free perovskite), Ni0–Co0, La2O3, La2TiO5, and non-stoichiometric La2NiO4, depending on H2 content of the reductive gases. The degree of reduction of nickel from LaNi0.5Ti0.5O3 reduced with 1.8% H2/Ar and 10% H2/Ar was equal to 36.5% and 95.3%, respectively, while that from LaNi0.5Ti0.45Co0.05O3 or LaNi0.45Co0.05Ti0.5O3, including cobalt, reduced with 10% H2/Ar, was equal to 71.9% and 93.9%, respectively. LaNi0.5Ti0.45Co0.05O3 showed Ni3+ and Co3+ amounts higher than the other perovskites. By increasing H2 content in the reductive mixture from 1.8% to 10%, sintering of metallic nickel was not observed. Moreover, Ni0 displayed weaker metal–support interaction than that observed for Co0, where the support was composed of La containing oxides. LaNi0.5Ti0.5O3 perovskite was used as a catalyst for steam reforming of methane. Syngas production was attributed to the number of Ni sites determined using Rietveld Refinement of X-ray diffraction pattern of this catalyst after the reaction.
X-ray powder diffraction data for the two new polymorphs of 1-methylhydantoin, C4H6N2O2, are reported. The polymorph II (MH-II) crystallizes in the orthorhombic system with space group Pna21 [a = 19.0323(7) Å, b = 3.91269(8) Å, c = 6.8311(7) Å, Z′ = 1, Z = 4, unit cell volume V = 508.70(3) Å3. Polymorph III (MH-III) crystallizes in the orthorhombic system with space group P212121 [a = a = 7.82427(5), b = 9.8230(5), c = 20.2951(4), Z′ = 3, Z = 12, unit cell volume V = 1563.5(1) Å3]. All measured lines, in each case, were indexed and are consistent with the space group.
Learn to assess electromigration reliability and design more resilient chips in this comprehensive and practical resource. Beginning with fundamental physics and building to advanced methodologies, this book enables the reader to develop highly reliable on-chip wiring stacks and power grids. Through a detailed review on the role of microstructure, interfaces and processing on electromigration reliability, as well as characterisation, testing and analysis, the book follows the development of on-chip interconnects from microscale to nanoscale. Practical modeling methodologies for statistical analysis, from simple 1D approximation to complex 3D description, can be used for step-by-step development of reliable on-chip wiring stacks and industrial-grade power/ground grids. This is an ideal resource for materials scientists and reliability and chip design engineers.
Exact and approximate mathematical models for the effects of sample transparency on the powder diffraction intensity data are examined. Application of the formula based on the first-order approximation about the deviation angle is justified for realistic measurement and computing systems. The effects of sample transparency are expressed by double convolution formulas applying two different scale transforms, including three parameters, goniometer radius R, penetration depth μ−1, and thickness of the sample t. The deconvolutional treatment automatically recovers the lost intensity and corrects the peak shift and asymmetric deformation of peak profile caused by the sample transparency.