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H.J. Ryu
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Proceedings Papers
ISTFA2018, ISTFA 2018: Conference Proceedings from the 44th International Symposium for Testing and Failure Analysis, 345-348, October 28–November 1, 2018,
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This paper shows for the first time chip level electron beam probing on fully functional 10nm and 14nm node FinFET chips with sub-fin level resolution using techniques developed in house. Three novel electron beam probing techniques were developed and used in the debug and fault isolation of advanced node semiconductor devices. These techniques were E-beam logic state imaging, electron-beam signal image mapping, and E-beam device perturbation. Two tools that can offer all three techniques were constructed and used in production. The techniques have been successfully applied to real case chip debug and fault isolation on advanced 10nm and 14nm FinFET on production tools developed in-house. Sub-fin level resolution was achieved for the first time.
Proceedings Papers
ISTFA2017, ISTFA 2017: Conference Proceedings from the 43rd International Symposium for Testing and Failure Analysis, 473-475, November 5–9, 2017,
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When failure analysis is performed on a circuit composed of FinFETs, the degree of defect isolation, in some cases, requires isolation to the fin level inside the problematic FinFET for complete understanding of root cause. This work shows successful application of electron beam alteration of current flow combined with nanoprobing for precise isolation of a defect down to fin level. To understand the mechanism of the leakage, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) slice was made along the leaky drain contact (perpendicular to fin direction) by focused ion beam thinning and lift-out. TEM image shows contact and fin. Stacking fault was found in the body of the silicon fin highlighted by the technique described in this paper.
Proceedings Papers
ISTFA2015, ISTFA 2015: Conference Proceedings from the 41st International Symposium for Testing and Failure Analysis, 382-387, November 1–5, 2015,
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A novel fault isolation technique, electron beam induced resistance change (EBIRCh), allows for the direct stimulation and localization of eBeam current sensitive defects with resolution of approximately 100nm square, continuing a history of beam based failure isolation methods. EBIRCh has been shown to work over a range of defects, significantly decreasing the time required for isolation of shorts through straightforward high resolution imagery, allowing for explicit visual defect isolation with a linear resolution of approximately 10nm. This paper discusses the operational setups for the source and amplifier while performing an EBIRCh scan, describes the processes involved in the Intel test vehicle that was used to test EBIRCh, and provides information on two independent functional theories for EBIRCh that operate in conjunction to a greater or lesser extent depending on the defect type. EBIRCh is expected to improve through-put and resolution on various defect types compared to conventional fault isolation techniques.