Title: Final Lesson
1Final Lesson
- ESD
- Summary VLSI Technologies
2ESD
The gate oxide in CMOS transistors is extremely
thin (100 Ã… or less). This leaves the gate oxide
of the I/O cell input transistors susceptible to
breakdown from static electricity ( electrostatic
discharge , or ESD ). ESD arises when we or
machines handle the package leads (like the shock
I sometimes get when I touch a doorknob after
walking across the carpet at work). Sometimes
this problem is called electrical overstress
(EOS) since most ESD-related failures are caused
not by gate-oxide breakdown, but by the thermal
stress (melting) that occurs when the n -channel
transistor in an output driver overheats (melts)
due to the large current that can flow in the
drain diffusion connected to a pad during an ESD
event. To protect the I/O cells from ESD, the
input pads are normally tied to device structures
that clamp the input voltage to below the gate
breakdown voltage (which can be as low as 10 V
with a 100 Ã… gate oxide). Some I/O cells use
transistors with a special ESD implant that
increases breakdown voltage and provides
protection. I/O driver transistors can also use
elongated drain structures (ladder structures)
and large drain-to-gate spacing to help limit
current, but in a salicide process that lowers
the drain resistance this is difficult. One
solution is to mask the I/O cells during the
salicide step. Another solution is to use pnpn
and npnp diffusion structures called
silicon-controlled rectifiers (SCRs) to clamp
voltages and divert current to protect the I/O
circuits from ESD.
3ESD Cont.
- There are several ways to model the capability
of an I/O cell to withstand EOS. The human-body
model ( HBM ) represents ESD by a 100 pF
capacitor discharging through a 1.5 kohm resistor
(this is an International Electro technical
Committee, IEC, specification). Typical voltages
generated by the human body are in the range of
24 kV, and we often see an I/O pad cell rated by
the voltage it can withstand using the HBM. The
machine model ( MM ) represents an ESD event
generated by automated machine handlers. Typical
MM parameters use a 200 pF capacitor (typically
charged to 200 V) discharged through a 25 ohm
resistor, corresponding to a peak initial current
of nearly 10 A. The charge-device model ( CDM ,
also called device chargedischarge) represents
the problem when an IC package is charged, in a
shipping tube for example, and then grounded. If
the maximum charge on a package is 3 nC (a
typical measured figure) and the package
capacitance to ground is 1.5 pF, we can simulate
this event by charging a 1.5 pF capacitor to 2 kV
and discharging it through a 1 ohm resistor.
4VLSI Technologies
- CMOS Integration,Memory, Power diss, Input
Impedance (Composition),Cost - Bulk Logic, Mixed Signal, Analog, Embedded
(DRAM,Flash,EEProm) - SOI Lower Voltage/Power dissipation , Less
Substrate Noise, Smaller Layout, Eliminates latch
upHigh energy implanter - HV/LV Standard , Up to 100V/5V
- BiCMOS Integration, Speed,Memory, Power diss,
- Input Impedance, Drive, Noise
- Bipolar Speed, Drive, Noise, Cost
- Non Silicon SiGe (Emerging BiCMOS Integration
) , - GaAs (BJT, better Ft)
- HomoJunction HetroJunction Transistors (HBT
better Emitter efficiency,lower Base Res. gtgt
Freq. response, temp range)