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| {{More footnotes|date=July 2010}}
| | Adrianne Le is the logo my parents gave me but you can [http://dict.leo.org/?search=connect connect] with me anything you like. Vermont has always been my home and I true love every day living here. As a girl what I do like is to master croquet but I may not make it my line of work really. Filing offers been my profession smoothly time and I'm doing pretty good financially. You can find my world wide web here: http://[http://en.Wiktionary.org/wiki/prometeu.net prometeu.net]<br><br>Here is my web site hack clash of clans ([http://prometeu.net sites]) |
| '''Electromigration''' is the transport of material caused by the gradual movement of the [[ion]]s in a [[Conductor (material)|conductor]] due to the [[momentum]] transfer between conducting [[electron]]s and diffusing metal [[atom]]s. The effect is important in applications where high direct current densities are used, such as in [[microelectronics]] and related structures. As the structure size in [[electronics]] such as [[integrated circuit]]s (ICs) decreases, the practical significance of this effect increases.
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| [[File:Electromigration.png|thumb|upright=1.5|Electromigration is due to the momentum transfer from the electrons moving in a wire]]
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| == History ==
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| The phenomenon of electromigration has been known for over 100 years, having been discovered by the French scientist Gerardin.<ref>http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/iel5/9994/32106/01493049.pdf?arnumber=1493049</ref> The topic first became of practical interest in 1966 when the first integrated circuits became commercially available. The first observation of electromigration in thin films was made by I. Blech.<ref name="Blech" >I. Blech: ''Electromigration in Thin Aluminum Films on Titanium Nitride.'' Journal of Applied Physics, Vol 47, pp. 1203-1208, April 1976.</ref> Research in this field was pioneered by a number of investigators throughout the fledgling [[semiconductor]] industry. One of the most important engineering studies was performed by Jim Black of [[Motorola]], after whom [[Black's equation]] is named.<ref name="Black" >J.R. Black: ''Electromigration - A Brief Survey and Some Recent Results.'' IEEE Trans. on Electron Devices, Vol. ED-16 (No. 4), pp. 338-347, April 1969.</ref> At the time, the metal interconnects in ICs were still about 10 [[micrometre]]s wide. Currently interconnects are only hundreds to tens of [[nanometer]]s in width, making research in electromigration increasingly important.
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| == Practical implications of electromigration ==
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| [[File:leiterbahn ausfallort elektromigration.jpg|thumb|right|[[scanning electron microscope|SEM]] image of a failure caused by electromigration in a [[copper]] interconnect. The [[Passivation (chemistry)|passivation]] has been removed by [[reactive ion etching]] and [[hydrofluoric acid]]]]
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| Electromigration decreases the reliability of chips ([[integrated circuits]] (ICs)). It can cause the eventual loss of connections or failure of a circuit. Since reliability is critically important for [[Space exploration|space travel]], [[Armed force|military purposes]], [[anti-lock braking system|anti-lock braking systems]], medical equipment like [[Automated External Defibrillator]]s and is even important for personal computers or home entertainment systems, the reliability of chips [[integrated circuits|(ICs)]] is a major focus of research efforts.
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| Due to difficulty of testing under real conditions, [[Black's equation]] is used to predict the life span of integrated circuits.
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| To use [[Black's equation]], the component is put through [[high temperature operating life]] (HTOL) testing. The component's expected life span under real conditions is [[Extrapolation|extrapolated]] from data gathered during the testing.<ref name="Black" />
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| Although electromigration damage ultimately results in failure of the affected IC, the first symptoms are intermittent glitches, and are quite challenging to diagnose. As some interconnects fail before others, the circuit exhibits seemingly random errors, which may be indistinguishable from other failure mechanisms (such as [[electrostatic discharge]] damage). In a laboratory setting, electromigration failure is readily imaged with an electron microscope, as interconnect erosion leaves telltale visual markers on the metal layers of the IC.
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| With increasing miniaturization the probability of failure due to electromigration increases in [[Very-large-scale integration|VLSI]] and [[Ultra Large Scale Integration|ULSI]] circuits because both the power density and the current density increase. Specifically, line widths will continue to decrease over time, as will wire cross-sectional areas. Currents are also reduced due to lower supply voltages and shrinking gate capacitances. However, as current reduction is constrained by increasing frequencies, the more marked decrease in cross-sectional areas (compared to current reduction) will give rise to increased current densities in ICs going forward.<ref name="Lienig2" >J. Lienig: "Electromigration and Its Impact on Physical Design in Future Technologies " [http://www.ifte.de/mitarbeiter/lienig/ISPD_2013_p33_40.pdf (Download paper)], ''Proc. of the Int. Symposium on Physical Design (ISPD) 2013'', pp. 33–44, March 2013</ref>
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| In advanced [[semiconductor manufacturing]] processes, [[copper]] has replaced [[aluminium]] as the interconnect material of choice. Despite its greater fragility in the fabrication process, copper is preferred for its superior conductivity. It is also intrinsically less susceptible to electromigration. However, electromigration (EM) continues to be an ever present challenge to device fabrication, and therefore the EM research for copper interconnects is ongoing (though a relatively new field).
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| In modern consumer electronic devices, ICs rarely fail due to electromigration effects. This is because proper semiconductor design practices incorporate the effects of electromigration into the IC's layout. Nearly all IC design houses use automated [[Electronic design automation|EDA]] tools to check and correct electromigration problems at the transistor layout-level. When operated within the manufacturer's specified temperature and voltage range, a properly designed IC device is more likely to fail from other (environmental) causes, such as cumulative damage from [[gamma ray|gamma-ray]] bombardment.
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| Nevertheless, there have been documented cases of product failures due to electromigration. In the late 1980s, one line of [[Western Digital]]'s desktop drives suffered widespread, predictable failure 12–18 months after field usage. Using forensic analysis of the returned bad units, engineers identified improper design-rules in a third-party supplier's IC controller. By replacing the bad component with that of a different supplier, WD was able to correct the flaw, but not before significant damage to the company's reputation.
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| Electromigration can be a cause of degradation in some [[power semiconductor device]]s such as low voltage [[power MOSFET]]s, in which the lateral current through the source contact metallisation (often aluminium) can reach the critical current densities during overload conditions. The degradation of the aluminium layer causes an increase in on-state resistance, and can eventually lead to complete failure.
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| == Fundamentals ==
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| The material properties of the metal interconnects have a strong influence on the life span. The characteristics are predominantly the composition of the metal alloy and the dimensions of the conductor. The shape of the conductor, the crystallographic orientation of the grains in the metal, procedures for the layer deposition, heat treatment or [[Annealing (metallurgy)|annealing]], characteristics of the [[Passivation (chemistry)|passivation]] and the interface to other materials also affect the durability of the interconnects. There are also grave differences with time dependent current: [[direct current]] or different [[alternating current]] waveforms cause different effects.
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| === Forces on ions in an electrical field ===
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| Two [[force]]s affect ionized [[atom]]s in a conductor: 1) The direct [[Electrostatics|electrostatic]] force ''F<sub>e</sub>'', as a result of the electric field, which has the same direction as the electric field, and 2) The force from the exchange of momentum with other [[charge carrier]]s ''F<sub>p</sub>'', toward the flow of charge carriers, is in the opposite direction of the electric field. In metallic conductors ''F<sub>p</sub>'' is caused by a so-called "electron wind" or "[[Ion wind]]".
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| The resulting force ''F<sub>res</sub>'' on an activated ion in the electrical field is
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| <center><math>F_{res}=F_e-F_p=q\cdot Z^*\cdot E=q\cdot Z^*\cdot j\cdot \rho
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| </math></center>
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| <!-- I am trying to join the two articles from here -->
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| <!-- and not succeeding very well. But fixed anyway -->
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| Electromigration occurs when some of the [[momentum]] of a moving electron is transferred to a nearby activated ion. This causes the ion to move from its original position. Over time this force knocks a significant number of atoms far from their original positions. A break or gap can develop in the conducting material, preventing the flow of electricity. In narrow interconnect conductors, such as those linking transistors and other components in integrated circuits, this is known as a '''void''' or '''internal''' '''failure''' [[Electric circuit|open circuit]]. Electromigration can also cause the atoms of a conductor to pile up and drift toward other nearby conductors, creating an unintended electrical connection known as a '''hillock failure''' or '''whisker failure''' ([[short circuit]]). Both of these situations can lead to a malfunction of the circuit.
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| == Failure mechanisms ==
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| === Diffusion mechanisms ===
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| In a homogeneous crystalline structure, because of the uniform lattice structure of the metal ions, there is hardly any momentum transfer between the conduction electrons and the metal ions. However, this symmetry does not exist at the grain boundaries and material interfaces, and so here momentum is transferred much more vigorously. Since the metal ions in these regions are bonded more weakly than in a regular crystal lattice, once the electron wind has reached a certain strength, atoms become separated from the grain boundaries and are transported in the direction of the current. This direction is also influenced by the grain boundary itself, because atoms tend to move along grain boundaries.
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| Diffusion processes caused by electromigration can be divided into grain boundary diffusion, bulk diffusion and surface diffusion. In general, grain boundary diffusion is the major electromigration process in aluminum wires, whereas surface diffusion is dominant in copper interconnects.
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| === Thermal effects ===
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| In an ideal conductor, where atoms are arranged in a perfect [[crystal structure|lattice]] structure, the electrons moving through it would experience no collisions and electromigration would not occur. In real conductors, defects in the lattice structure and the random thermal vibration of the atoms about their positions causes electrons to collide with the atoms and [[scattering|scatter]], which is the source of electrical resistance (at least in metals; see [[electrical conduction]]). Normally, the amount of momentum imparted by the relatively low-[[mass]] electrons is not enough to permanently displace the atoms. However, in high-power situations (such as with the increasing current draw and decreasing wire sizes in modern [[VLSI]] [[microprocessor]]s), if many electrons bombard the atoms with enough force to become significant, this will accelerate the process of electromigration by causing the atoms of the conductor to vibrate further from their ideal lattice positions, increasing the amount of electron [[scattering]]. High [[Current (electricity)|current density]] increases the number of electrons scattering against the atoms of the conductor, and hence the speed at which those atoms are displaced.
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| In integrated circuits, electromigration does not occur in [[semiconductor]]s directly, but in the metal interconnects deposited onto them (see [[Fabrication (semiconductor)|semiconductor device fabrication]]).
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| Electromigration is exacerbated by high current densities and the [[Joule heating]] of the conductor (see [[electrical resistance]]), and can lead to eventual failure of electrical components. Localized increase of current density is known as [[current crowding]].
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| === Balance of atom concentration ===
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| A governing equation which describes the atom concentration evolution throughout some interconnect segment, is the conventional mass balance (continuity) equation
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| <math>\frac{\partial N}{\partial t} + \nabla\cdot\vec J = 0</math>
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| where <math>N(\vec x, t)</math> is the atom concentration at the point with a coordinates <math>\vec x=(x, y, z)</math> at the moment of time <math>
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| t</math>, and <math>
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| J</math> is the total atomic flux at this location. The total atomic flux <math>
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| J</math> is a combination of the fluxes caused by the different atom migration forces. The major forces are induced by the [[electric current]], and by the gradients of temperature, [[stress (physics)|mechanical stress]] and concentration. <math>\vec J = \vec J_c + \vec J_T + \vec J_\sigma + \vec J_N</math>.
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| To define the fluxes mentioned above:
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| • <math>\vec J_c = \frac{NeZD\rho}{kT}\vec j</math>. Here <math>
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| e</math> is the [[electron]] charge, <math>
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| eZ</math> is the effective charge of the migrating atom, <math>\rho</math> the [[resistivity]] of the conductor where atom migration takes place, <math>\vec j</math> is the local current density, <math>
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| k</math> is [[Boltzmann's constant|Boltzmann’s constant]], <math>
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| T</math> is the [[absolute temperature]]. <math>D(\vec x, t)</math> is the time and position dependent atom diffusivity.
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| • <math>\vec J_T = -\frac{NDQ}{kT^2}\nabla T</math>. We use <math>
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| Q</math> the heat of thermal diffusion.
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| • <math>\vec J_\sigma = \frac{ND\Omega}{kT}\nabla H</math> here <math>\Omega=1/N_0</math> is the atomic volume and <math>N_0</math> is initial atomic [[concentration]], <math>H=(\sigma_{11}+\sigma_{22}+\sigma_{33})/3</math> is the [[hydrostatic stress]] and <math>\sigma_{11},\sigma_{22},\sigma_{33}</math> are the components of principal stress.
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| • <math>\vec J_N = -D\nabla N</math>.
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| Assuming a vacancy mechanism for atom [[diffusion]] we can express <math>
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| D</math> as a function of the hydrostatic stress <math>D = D_0\exp(\frac{\Omega H - E_A}{kT})</math> where <math>E_A</math> is the effective [[activation energy]] of the thermal diffusion of metal atoms. The vacancy concentration represents availability of empty lattice sites, which might be occupied by a migrating atom.
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| == Electromigration-aware design ==
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| === Electromigration reliability of a wire (Black's equation) ===
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| {{main | Black's equation }}
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| At the end of the 1960s J. R. Black developed an empirical model to estimate the [[MTTF]] (mean time to failure) of a wire, taking electromigration into consideration. Since then, the formula has gained popularity in the semiconductor industry. :<ref name="Black" /><ref>{{cite book
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| |title=Handbook of multilevel metallization for integrated circuits: materials, technology, and applications
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| |first1=Syd R.
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| |last1=Wilson
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| |first2=Clarence J.
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| |last2=Tracy
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| |first3=John L.
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| |last3=Freeman
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| |publisher=William Andrew
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| |year=1993
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| |isbn=0-8155-1340-2
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| |page=607
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| |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=jHeN7KYkj28C}}, [http://books.google.com/books?id=jHeN7KYkj28C&pg=PA607 Page 607, equation 24]
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| </ref>
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| '''<math>\text{MTTF} = A (J^{-n}) e^{\frac{E_a}{k T}}</math>'''
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| Here <math>A</math> is a constant based on the cross-sectional area of the interconnect, <math>J</math> is the current density, <math>E_a</math> is the [[activation energy]] (e.g. 0.7 eV for grain boundary diffusion in aluminum), <math>k</math> is the [[Boltzmann's constant]], <math>T</math> is the temperature in Kelvin and <math>n</math> a scaling factor (usually set to 2 according to Black).<ref name="Black" /> The temperature of the conductor appears in the exponent, i.e. it strongly affects the MTTF of the interconnect. For an interconnect to remain reliable the temperature rises, the maximum tolerable current density of the conductor must necessarily decrease. However, as interconnect technology advances at the nanometer scale, the validity of Black's equation becomes increasingly questionable.
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| === Wire material ===
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| The most common conductor used in integrated circuits is aluminium, due to its good adherence to substrate, good conductivity, and ability to form [[ohmic contact]]s with silicon. However, pure aluminium is susceptible to electromigration. Research shows that adding 2-4% of copper to aluminium increases resistance to electromigration about 50 times. The effect is attributed to the grain boundary segregation of copper, which greatly inhibits the diffusion of aluminium atoms across grain boundaries. <!-- Electrical contacts - fundamentals, applications, and technology - CRC Press 2006 -->
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| Pure copper wires can withstand approximately five times more current density than aluminum wires while maintaining similar reliability requirements.<ref name="Lienig" >J. Lienig: "Introduction to Electromigration-Aware Physical Design" [http://www.ifte.de/mitarbeiter/lienig/ispd06_emPaper_lienig.pdf (Download paper)], ''Proc. of the Int. Symposium on Physical Design (ISPD) 2006'', pp. 39–46, April 2006.</ref> This is mainly due to the higher electromigration activation energy levels of copper, caused by its superior electrical and thermal conductivity as well as its higher melting point. Further improvements can be achieved by alloying copper with about 1% [[palladium]] which inhibits diffusion of copper atoms along grain boundaries in the same way as the addition of copper to aluminium interconnect.
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| === Bamboo structure and metal slotting ===
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| It is obvious that a wider wire results in smaller current density and, hence, less likelihood of electromigration. Also, the metal grain size has influence; the smaller grains, the more grain boundaries and the higher likelihood of electromigration effects. However, if you reduce wire width to below the average grain size of the wire material, grain boundaries become "crosswise", more or less perpendicular to the length of the wire. The resulting structure resembles the joints in a stalk of bamboo. With such a structure, the resistance to electromigration increases, despite an increase in current density. This apparent contradiction is caused by the perpendicular position of the grain boundaries; the boundary diffusion factor is excluded, and material transport is correspondingly reduced.<ref name="Lienig" />
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| However, the maximum wire width possible for a bamboo structure is usually too narrow for signal lines of large-magnitude currents in analog circuits or for power supply lines. In these circumstances, slotted wires are often used, whereby rectangular holes are carved in the wires. Here, the widths of the individual metal structures in between the slots lie within the area of a bamboo structure, while the resulting total width of all the metal structures meets power requirements.<ref name="Lienig" />
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| === Blech length ===
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| There is a lower limit for the length of the interconnect that will allow electromigration to occur. It is known as “Blech length”.<ref name="Blech" /> Any wire that has a length below this limit will not fail by electromigration. Here, a mechanical stress buildup causes an atom back flow process which reduces or even compensates the effective material flow towards the anode. The Blech length must be considered when designing test structures for electromigration.
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| === Via arrangements and corner bends ===
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| Particular attention must be paid to [[Via (electronics)|vias]] and contact holes.The current carrying capacity of a via is much less than a metallic wire of same length. Hence multiple vias are often used, whereby the geometry of the via array is very significant: multiple vias must be organized such that the resulting current is distributed as evenly as possible through all the vias.
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| Attention must also be paid to bends in interconnects. In particular, 90-degree corner bends must be avoided, since the current density in such bends is significantly higher than that in oblique angles (e.g., 135 degrees).<ref name="Lienig" />
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| === Electromigration in solder joints ===
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| The typical current density at which electromigration occurs in Cu or Al interconnects is 10<sup>6</sup> to 10<sup>7</sup> A/cm<sup>2</sup>. For solder joints (SnPb or SnAgCu lead-free) used in IC chips, however, electromigration occurs at much lower current densities, e.g. 10<sup>4</sup> A/cm<sup>2</sup>.
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| It causes a net atom transport along the direction of electron flow. The atoms pile up at the anode, voids are generated at the cathode and back stress is induced during electromigration. The typical failure of a solder joint due to electromigration will occur at the cathode side. Due to the current crowding effect, voids form first at the corner of the solder joint. Then the voids extend and cause a failed circuit. Electromigration also influences formation of [[intermetallic compound]]s.
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| === Electromigration and TCAD (Technology Computer Aided Design) ===
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| The complete mathematical model describing electromigration consists of several partial differential equations (PDEs) <ref name="Basaran_Lin03" >C. Basaran, M. Lin, and H. Ye : ''A Thermodynamic Model for Electrical Current Induced Damage.'' Int. J. of Solids and Structures, Vol 40, pp. 7315-7327, 2003.</ref> which need to be solved for three-dimensional geometrical domains representing segments of an interconnect structure. Such a mathematical model forms the basis for simulation of electromigration in modern TCAD tools.<ref name="Ceric_Selberherr11" >H. Ceric and S. Selberherr : ''Electromigration in Submicron Interconnect Features of Integrated Circuits.'' Materials Science and Engineering R, Vol 71, pp. 53-56, 2011.</ref>
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| Usage of TCAD tools for detailed investigations of electromigration induced interconnect degradation is gaining importance. Results of TCAD study in combination with reliability tests lead to modification of design rules improving the interconnect resistance to electromigration.<ref name="Orio_Ceric12" >R. Orio, H. Ceric and S. Selberher : ''Electromigration Failure in a Copper Dual-Damascene Structure with a Through Silicon Via.'' Microelectronics Reliability, Vol 52, pp. 1981–1986, 2012.</ref>
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| ==See also==
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| *[[Integrated circuit]]
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| *[[Semiconductor]]
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| *[[Electromagnetism]]
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| *[[Electrical conduction]]
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| *[[Electromigrated Nanogaps]]
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| *[[Kirkendall effect]]
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| == Further reading ==
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| *{{cite journal |author=Black, J.R. |title=Electromigration - A Brief Survey and Some Recent Results |journal=IEEE Trans. on Electron Devices |volume=16 |issue=4 |pages=338–347 |date=April 1969 |doi=10.1109/T-ED.1969.16754}}
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| *{{cite journal |author=Black, J.R. |title=Electromigration Failure Modes in Aluminium Metallization for Semiconductor Devices |journal=Proc. of the IEEE |volume=57 |issue=9 |pages=1587–94 |date=September 1969 |doi=10.1109/PROC.1969.7340}}
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| *{{cite journal |author=Ho, P.S. |title=Basic problems for Electromigration in VLSI applications |journal=Proc. of the IEEE |volume= |issue= |pages=288–291 |year=1982 |month=}}
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| *{{cite journal |author=Ho, P.S., Kwok T. |title=Electromigration in metals |journal=Rep. Prog. Phys. |volume=52 |issue= |pages=301–348 |year=1989 |doi=10.1088/0034-4885/52/3/002 |bibcode = 1989RPPh...52..301H }}
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| *{{cite journal |author=Gardner, D.S., Meindl, J.D., Saraswat, K.C. |title=Interconnection and Electromigration Scaling Theory |journal=IEEE Trans. on Electron Devices |volume=34 |issue=3 |pages=633–643 |date=March 1987 |doi=10.1109/T-ED.1987.22974}}
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| *Christou, Aris: ''Electromigration and Electronic Device Degradation''. John Wiley & Sons, 1994.
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| *Ghate, P.B.: [http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/search/wrapper.jsp?arnumber=4208466 Electromigration-Induced Failures in VLSI Interconnects], ''IEEE Conference Publication'', Vol. 20:p 292 299, March 1982.
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| *{{cite journal |author=B.D. Knowlton, C.V. Thompson |title=Simulation of temperature and current density scaling of the electromigration-limited reliability of near-bamboo interconnects |journal=Material Research Society |volume=13 |issue=5 |pages= |year=1998 }}
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| *{{cite journal |author=Changsup Ryu; Kee-Won Kwon; Loke, A.L.S.; Haebum Lee; Nogami, T.; Dubin, V.M.; Kavari, R.A.; Ray, G.W.; Wong, S.S.; |title=Microstructure and Reliability of Copper Interconnects |journal=IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices |volume=46 |issue=6 |pages=1113–9 |date=June 1999 |doi=10.1109/16.766872|bibcode = 1999ITED...46.1113R }}
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| *H.C. Louie Liu, S.P. Murarka: "Modeling of Temperature Increase Due to Joule Heating During Elektromigration Measurements. Center for Integrated Electronics and Electronics Manufacturing", ''Materials Research Society Symposium Proceedings'' Vol. 427:p. 113 119.
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| *K. Banerjee, A. Mehrotra: ''Global (Interconnect) Warming. Circuits and Devices'', pp. 16 32, September 2001.
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| *{{cite journal |author=K.N. Tu |title=Recent advances on electromigration in very-large-scale-integration of interconnects |journal=Journal of Applied Physics |volume=94 |issue=9 |year=2003 | doi = 10.1063/1.1611263 | bibcode = 2003JAP....94.5451T }}
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| *J. Lienig, G. Jerke: {{doi-inline|10.1145/1119772.1119946|Current-Driven Wire Planning for Electromigration Avoidance in Analog Circuits}}, ''Proc. of the 8th Asia and South Pacific Design Automation Conference (ASP-DAC), 2003'', pp. 783–788.
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| *{{cite journal |author=G. Jerke, J. Lienig |title=Hierarchical Current Density Verification in Arbitrarily Shaped Metallization Patterns of Analog Circuits |journal=IEEE Transactions on Computer-Aided Design of Integrated Circuits and Systems |volume=23 |issue=1 |pages=80–90 |date=January 2004 |doi=10.1109/TCAD.2003.819899}}
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| *{{cite journal |author=Tarik Omer Ogurtani, Ersin Emre Oren |title=Irreversible thermodynamics of triple junctions during the intergranular void motion under the electromigration forces |journal=Int. J. Solids Struct |volume=42 |issue=13 |pages=3918–52 |date=June 2005 |url= |doi=10.1016/j.ijsolstr.2004.11.013}}
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| *J. Lienig: {{doi-inline|10.1145/1123008.1123017|"Introduction to Electromigration-Aware Physical Design"}}, [http://www.ifte.de/mitarbeiter/lienig/ispd06_emPaper_lienig.pdf (Download paper)] ''Proc. of the Int. Symposium on Physical Design (ISPD) 2006'', pp. 39–46, April 2006.
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| *{{cite journal |author=Luhua Xu, John H.L. Pang and K.N. Tu |title=Effect of electromigration-induced back stress gradient on nano-indentation marker movement in SnAgCu solder joints |journal=Applied Physics Letters |volume=89 |issue= |page=221909 |year=2006 |doi=10.1063/1.2397549 |bibcode = 2006ApPhL..89v1909X }}
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| *{{cite journal |author=Fei Ren, Jae-Woong Nah, K. N. Tu, Bingshou Xiong, Luhua Xu, and John H. L. Pang |title=Electromigration induced ductile-to-brittle transition in lead-free solder joints |journal=Applied Physics Letters |volume=89 |issue= |page=141914 |year=2006 |doi=10.1063/1.2358113 |bibcode = 2006ApPhL..89n1914R }}
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| *{{cite journal |author=C. Basaran, M. Lin, and H. Ye |title=A Thermodynamic Model for Electrical Current Induced Damage |journal=Int. J. of Solids and Structures |volume=40 |issue= |pages=7315–27 |year=2003 |doi=10.1016/j.ijsolstr.2003.08.018 }}
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| *{{cite journal |author=Cher Ming Tan, Arijit Roy |title=Electromigration in ULSI interconnects |journal=Materials Science and Engineering: R: Reports |volume=58 |issue= |pages=1–75 |year=2007 }}
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| *{{cite journal |author=Arijit Roy, Cher Ming Tan |title=Very High Current Density Package Level Electromigration Test for Copper Interconnects |journal=J. Appl. Phys. |volume=103 |issue= |page=093707 |year=2008 |doi=10.1063/1.2917065 |bibcode = 2008JAP...103i3707R }}
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| === Reference standards ===
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| * [[Electronic Industries Alliance|EIA]]/[[JEDEC]] Standard '''EIA/JESD61''': Isothermal Electromigration Test Procedure.
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| * [[Electronic Industries Alliance|EIA]]/[[JEDEC]] Standard '''EIA/JESD63''': Standard method for calculating the electromigration model parameters for current density and temperature.
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| ==Notes and references==
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| <references/>
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| == External links ==
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| {{Commonscat-inline}}
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| *[http://www.csl.mete.metu.edu.tr/Electromigration/emig.htm] ''What is Electromigration?'', Computer Simulation Laboratory, Middle East Technical University.
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| *[http://www.eetimes.com/design/eda-design/4017969/Electromigration-for-Designers-An-Introduction-for-the-Non-Specialist] ''Electromigration for Designers: An Introduction for the Non-Specialist'', J.R. Lloyd, EETimes.
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| *[http://www.dwpg.com/content.php?contid=2&artid=68 Semiconductor electromigration in-depth at DWPG.Com]
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| *[http://em.unipro.ru/?q=em/statement Modeling of electromigration process with void formation at UniPro R&D site]
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| *[http://www.doitpoms.ac.uk/tlplib/electromigration/index.php DoITPoMS Teaching and Learning Package- "Electromigration"]
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| [[Category:Electric and magnetic fields in matter]]
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| [[Category:Electronic design automation]]
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| [[Category:Semiconductor device defects]]
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