Thermal Effects in Deep Submicron VLSI Interconnects


Abstract

Thermal effects are an inseparable aspect of electrical power distribution and signal transmission through the interconnects in VLSI circuits due to self-heating caused by the flow of current. They impact interconnect design and electromigration reliability. For deep-submicron technologies, thermal effects are increasing due to aggressive interconnect scaling and introduction of new dielectric materials with poor thermal properties. Furthermore, thermally accelerated failures in interconnects under high-current short-pulse stress conditions, such as electrostatic discharge, have become a reliability concern.

This talk will begin with an introduction to the fundamentals of thermal effects and interconnect reliability modeling, followed by discussion of interconnect scaling trends, and in particular, their implications for interconnect performance, thermal effects, and reliability. The self-consistent interconnect design approach, which comprehends both electromigration and self-heating, will be discussed and applied to analyze reliability and performance of various low-k/Cu interconnect systems. Additionally, interconnect modeling and design under non steady-state self-heating conditions will also be examined.


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