Effects of dielectric materials on electromigration failure

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The effects of dielectric layers on electromigration failure were studied in situ using a high-voltage scanning electron microscope and at the wafer level using conventional accelerated testing. Several different passivation layers were deposited on wafers with A1 interconnect test structures. Prior to the deposition of the final dielectric, the wafers were processed identically and, whenever possible, simultaneously. Interconnects encapsulated with compliant polymer and very thin (0.1 mum) SiO2 layers demonstrated substantial lifetime extensions over those with more rigid (1 mum thick) SiO2 layers. Unpassivated lines behaved dramatically differently and failed much sooner than those covered with only 0.1 mum of SiO2. As expected, increasing the passivation thickness from 0.5 to 4 mum increased the electromigration lifetime for SiO2 covered specimens. The fabrication of silicon dioxide dielectrics using electron-cyclotron-resonance chemical-vapor deposition (CVD) and silicon nitride dielectrics via plasma-enhanced CVD damaged the interconnects. This damage nearly completely removed the barrier to void nucleation during electromigration. (C) 2001 American Institute of Physics.
Publisher
American Institute of Physics
Issue Date
2001-06
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Keywords

VOID NUCLEATION; AIR-GAPS; ALUMINUM INTERCONNECTS; PASSIVATION THICKNESS; CONSTANT MATERIALS; MECHANICAL-STRESS; AL INTERCONNECTS; FILM CONDUCTORS; THIN-FILMS; LINES

Citation

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS, v.89, no.12, pp.7797 - 7808

ISSN
0021-8979
DOI
10.1063/1.1372367
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/79392
Appears in Collection
EE-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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