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Gregory T. Ostrowicki , Nicholas J. Ginga, Sathya Raghavan, Suresh K. Sitaraman
George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering | Georgia Institute of Technology
Fundamental and Applied Fracture Characterization of Thin Film Systems
Interlayer Delamination Dielectric Cracking Applied Package Cracking
Problem StatementDelamination is a reliability concern for microelectronic, photonic, MEMS, and other thin film
engineering applications. Quantifying interface strength between films is necessary to predict product life, however experimentally measuring interface strength between thin films (<100 µm) is challenging. Therefore, new experimental methods are needed to test and measure the bond strength and resistance to delamination between thin film systems.
Magnetically Activated Peel Test (MAPT) • Three thin film strips attached to a central permanent magnet disc
• Force of magnetic repulsion lifts permanent magnet, and this force is proportional to the voltage supplied to the driving electromagnet
• At critical load, force on permanent magnet is sufficient to delaminate anchoring film strips
• Thin film/substrate interface strength is determined by mechanical analysis of peeling at the critical load
• Advantages: non-contact, fixtureless, monotonic & fatigue loading, simple and
representative fabrication, amenable to environmental conditioning
Experimental Results
Problem StatementMicro-scale and nano-scale thin films are being increasingly used in a wide range of emerging
technologies including microelectronics, optoelectronics, and MEMS devices. Typically thesethin film layers are composed of many different materials with dissimilar properties. Along withdelamination, a common mode of failure for thin films is cohesive fracture, through thethickness of the film. This can be caused by external mechanical loading from handling ordropping the device, CTE mismatch from thermal loading experienced while powering the
device. It is desired to characterize and measure the cohesive fracture toughness of these thinfilms to design devices with better reliability, performance, and life.
ObjectiveOngoing research at Georgia Institute of Technology is occurring to develop a fixturelesscohesive fracture toughness test that can be used for nano- and micro-scale thin films.
Test Concept
• Main Idea - Use intrinsic stress of Super Layer to generate fracture in films below it. Crack propagation will cease when the energy supplied by the super layer is equal to the critical fracture energy of the test material, and therefore provide a measurement of the fracture
toughness of the test material.
Preliminary Results
Problem StatementDuring Pb free flip-chip assembly, the stresses between a silicon chip and an multi layered
organic substrate are so high that a fracture in the interlayer dielectric (ILD) in the vicinity of thesolder bump may occur.
Objectives• To characterize interfacial and cohesive crack propagation in nanoscale BEoL stacks.
• To device an effective criterion for crack propagation through multilayered structures.
Approach• Global – local modeling approach was used to model the nanoscale BEoL stacks.
• A global assembly of the flip chip was modeled in ANSYS.
• The global model is simulated to cool down from reflow temperature to room temperature(RT) mimicking the reflow process.
• Displacement constraints from global model is transferred to local model at RT.
• In the current approach a crack of known length is embedded into the stack (local model)and strain energy release rate (G) is determined using virtual crack closure technique.
Global Model Results
Local Model and Results
Acknowledgements
Silicon
ILD
Vias
Crack
Chip warpage at RT
Chip Stresses (σy) at RT
Local models with embedded interfacial and cohesivecracks in the BEoL stack was developed.Cracks were simulated to propagate towards the chipcenter and the change in G with respect to the crack
length was studied.
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
20
1 3 5 7 9
G (
N/m
)
Crack Length
Cohesive Crack Propagation
G Towards Chip (N/m)
G towards Corner (N/m)
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
1 2 3 4 5 6
G (
N/m
)
Crack Length
Interfacial Crack Propagation
G Towards Chip (N/m)
G towards Corner (N/m)
Local Model Details
Silicon
Low – K layers
Ultra Low – K layers
(Cracks are embedded
in this layer)
Solder
Polyimide
Copper Traces
Different colors represent different
materials
The curves indicatethat there is a suddenchange in G near thecopper traces.
Al Pad
Tensile
Stress
Compressive
Stress
Stress Free
Advantages• Test method uses common clean room fabrication techniques
• Capable of small material dimensions (photolithography is the limit)
• The proposed technique does not require fixturing of the test material or external mechanical loads
• The propose technique has the ability to test a wide range of nanoscalefilm materials used in microelectronics, photovoltaics, MEMS, medical
devices.
• Utilizes a “Super Layer” material to generate and drive fracture
Crack Faces Free standing section
of test materialSuper Layer
Test Material
dA
dUG −=
Release
material
•Test Material: SiO2
• Thickness = 1.2 um
•Super Layer : Cr
• Thickness = 200 nm
• Stress = 1.2Gpa
• Au Release layer
• Thickness = 500 nm
•Test Material: SiO2
• Thickness = 315 nm
•Super Layer : Cr
• Thickness = 120 nm
• Stress = 1.2Gpa
• Au Release layer
• Thickness = ~23 nm
LTCC ConsultingSEM Lab, Inc.Assurance Technology CorporationACM Research Inc
9.1 V
∆max = 98µm
6.0 V
∆max = 35µm
This work is funded by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. CMMI-0800037
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