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1-6 of 6
Andrew J. Komrowski
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Proceedings Papers
ISTFA2005, ISTFA 2005: Conference Proceedings from the 31st International Symposium for Testing and Failure Analysis, 199-201, November 6–10, 2005,
Abstract
View Papertitled, Edge Enhancement for Acoustic Microscopy of Flip Chip Devices
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for content titled, Edge Enhancement for Acoustic Microscopy of Flip Chip Devices
Scanning acoustic microscopy (SAM) is a non-destructive tool for analysis of packaged devices. New materials, package configurations, and technologies have required adaptation of standard practices in SAM. The detection of cracked die, voids, or delamination in the underfill or package are standard issues for SAM. SAM can routinely detect large cracks through the central 80% of the die; however, the occurrence of smaller cracks at the edge of the flip chip die is problematic. This article proposes a model in which alteration in the standard SAM parameters, the gain and Time-of-Flight, enable detection of die edge cracks in assembled Flip Chip devices. IR imaging after thinning and polishing of the die confirms the die edge cracks. The SAM analysis can replace the IR imaging for detection of small die edge cracks taking minutes to complete instead of the hours involved in the sample preparation for IR imaging.
Proceedings Papers
ISTFA2004, ISTFA 2004: Conference Proceedings from the 30th International Symposium for Testing and Failure Analysis, 73-81, November 14–18, 2004,
Abstract
View Papertitled, Failure Analysis of Short Faults on Advanced Wire-Bond and Flip-Chip Packages with Scanning SQUID Microscopy
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for content titled, Failure Analysis of Short Faults on Advanced Wire-Bond and Flip-Chip Packages with Scanning SQUID Microscopy
Scanning SQUID (Superconducting Quantum Interference Device) Microscopy, known as SSM, is a non-destructive technique that detects magnetic fields in Integrated Circuits (IC). The magnetic field, when converted to current density via Fast Fourier Transform (FFT), is particularly useful to detect shorts and high resistance (HR) defects. A short between two wires or layers will cause the current to diverge from the path the designer intended. An analyst can see where the current is not matching the design, thereby easily localizing the fault. Many defects occur between or under metal layers that make it impossible using visible light or infrared emission detecting equipment to locate the defect. SSM is the only tool that can detect signals from defects under metal layers, since magnetic fields are not affected by them. New analysis software makes it possible for the analyst to overlay design layouts, such as CAD Knights, directly onto the current paths found by the SSM. In this paper, we present four case studies where SSM successfully localized short faults in advanced wire-bond and flip-chip packages after other fault analysis methods failed to locate the defects.
Proceedings Papers
ISTFA2004, ISTFA 2004: Conference Proceedings from the 30th International Symposium for Testing and Failure Analysis, 376-379, November 14–18, 2004,
Abstract
View Papertitled, Advanced Acoustic Micro Imaging Applications: Deciphering Multiple Acoustic Echoes and Reflections
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for content titled, Advanced Acoustic Micro Imaging Applications: Deciphering Multiple Acoustic Echoes and Reflections
The acquisition of reliable Acoustic Micro Images (AMI) are an essential non-destructive step in the Failure Analysis (FA) of electronic packages. Advanced packaging and new IC materials present challenges to the collection of reliable AMI signals. The AMI is complicated due to new technologies that utilize an increasing number of interfaces in ICs and packages. We present two case studies in which it is necessary to decipher the acoustic echoes from the signals generated by the interface of interest in order to acquire trustworthy information about the IC package.
Proceedings Papers
ISTFA2004, ISTFA 2004: Conference Proceedings from the 30th International Symposium for Testing and Failure Analysis, 389-392, November 14–18, 2004,
Abstract
View Papertitled, Backside Application of Acoustic Micro Imaging (AMI) on Plastic Ball Grid Array (PBGA) and Plastic Quad Flat Pack (PQFP) Packages
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for content titled, Backside Application of Acoustic Micro Imaging (AMI) on Plastic Ball Grid Array (PBGA) and Plastic Quad Flat Pack (PQFP) Packages
Acoustic Micro Imaging (AMI) is an established nondestructive technique for evaluation of electronic packages. Non-destructive evaluation of electronic packages is often a critical first step in the Failure Analysis (FA) process of semiconductor devices [1]. The molding compound to die surface interface of the Plastic Ball Grid Array (PBGA) and Plastic Quad Flat Pack (PQFP) packages is an important interface to acquire for the FA process. Occasionally, with these packages, the standard acoustic microscopy technique fails to identify defects at the molding compound to die surface interface. The hard to identify defects are found at the edge of the die next to the bond pads or under the bonds wires. This paper will present a technique, Backside Acoustic Micro Imaging (BAMI) analysis, which can better resolve the molding compound to die surface interface at the die edge by sending the acoustic signal through the backside of the PBGA and PQFP packages.
Proceedings Papers
ISTFA2003, ISTFA 2003: Conference Proceedings from the 29th International Symposium for Testing and Failure Analysis, 301-304, November 2–6, 2003,
Abstract
View Papertitled, An Evolution in Plastic Decapsulation Process Improvement
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for content titled, An Evolution in Plastic Decapsulation Process Improvement
Decapsulating wire-bonded plastic packages using fuming nitric or sulfuric acid is one of the most widely used methods for exposing a die during failure analysis [1]. The need to have physical access to the die in a packaged semiconductor device is often essential in the FA process. Regularly, the entire surface of the die must be exposed to take full advantage of techniques such as Emission Microscopy or Liquid Crystal. However, removing the plastic encapsulant using corrosive acids, such as fuming sulfuric acid, presents a challenge: achieving a fully exposed die surface while maintaining the device’s electrical functionality. Here we describe how our decapsulation process has evolved to address this challenge, resulting in improved survival rates for plastic packages decapsulated in the lab.
Proceedings Papers
ISTFA2002, ISTFA 2002: Conference Proceedings from the 28th International Symposium for Testing and Failure Analysis, 189-193, November 3–7, 2002,
Abstract
View Papertitled, Thin-Die Flip Chip Physical-FA Process Flow
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for content titled, Thin-Die Flip Chip Physical-FA Process Flow
The use of flip chip technology inside component packaging, so called flip chip in package (FCIP), is an increasingly common package type in the semiconductor industry because of high pin-counts, performance and reliability. Sample preparation methods and flows which enable physical failure analysis (PFA) of FCIP are thus in demand to characterize defects in die with these package types. As interconnect metallization schemes become more dense and complex, access to the backside silicon of a functional device also becomes important for fault isolation test purposes. To address these requirements, a detailed PFA flow is described which chronicles the sample preparation methods necessary to isolate a physical defect in the die of an organic-substrate FCIP.