The invention generally relates to programmable passive devices, and more particularly to stackable programmable vertical parallel plate capacitors or other passive devices and testing method.
Manufacturing of high performance mixed-mode and radio frequency (RF) CMOS and BiCMOS circuits require high performance passive capacitors with high reliability, high capacitance, and low cost (high manufacturing yield). These three factors can be traded off and are dependent on capacitor geometries. New CMOS technologies offer many options for incorporation of BEOL as well as FEOL passive devices into standard CMOS and BiCMOS to improve circuit integration and performance. For example, high-performance capacitors such as the vertical-parallel plate (VPP) capacitor are suitable for mixed-mode and RF applications.
VPP capacitors use combinations of single level metal capacitor with comb-comb or interdigitated comb-serpentine configurations to boost the capacitance value and density. Vias are used to link multiple metal levels together, and these linked vertical parallel capacitor structures significantly increase the capacitance value but still maintain relative small capacitor's surface area. The overall capacitance of the VPP can be increased by layout optimization.
Manufacturability and cost of quality on chip passive devices are essential to the development of high performance SiGe RF technologies. The VPP capacitor is very promising compared to other capacitor choices due to its relatively low manufacturing cost and simple integration. For the maximum chip performance, the large VPP capacitor (>10E6 μm2 surface area) with large capacitance is required. However, such large capacitor may be exposed to the risks of low yield and high reliability concern. (This is shown in
In a first aspect of the invention, a programmable passive device comprises a first node and a second node. A plurality of passive device elements are electrically coupled to the first node. A plurality of switches are electrically coupled to at least the second node and selectively coupled to a number of the plurality of passive device elements to provide the programmable passive device with a pre-determined value.
In another aspect of the invention, a programmable passive device comprises a common node and at least one further node. A first bank and second bank of passive device elements are electrically coupled to the common node. A plurality of switches is associated with each of the passive device elements of the first bank and the second bank. The plurality of switches are selectively coupled to at least one of the passive device elements of at least one of the first bank and the second bank and at least one further node to provide a pre-determined capacitance value.
In another aspect of the invention, a method comprises connecting all VPP blocks through a top bus to form a large VPP bank and providing a chip capacitance comparison or external capacitance check for individual VPP blocks. The method further includes turning off or blowing a fuse if a bad VPP block is found. In embodiments, the method further includes comparing a total capacitance of the connected VPP blocks to a target value and if the total capacitance and target value are not the same, the method trims parallel connected back-up VPP blocks out or serial connected back-up banks.
The invention relates to programmable passive devices such as capacitors, inductors, resistors or the like. More particularly, the invention relates to stackable programmable vertical parallel plate (VPP) capacitors or other passive devices such as, for example, resistors and inductors, and a testing method. In one embodiment of the invention, two or more VPP capacitors (or other passive devices) may be linked together by a switching device, e.g., fuse or switch, to provide increased reliability, performance and yield of devices such as, for example, RF devices. By using two or more smaller area sized VPP capacitors, e.g., 1,500 μm2, linked together instead of one single larger area sized capacitor, e.g., 22,500 μm2, the time to failure of the device is significantly increased, i.e., the device is more robust. By switching connectivity of the capacitors, the capacitance value (or other value when using other passive devices) can be tuned and/or programmed, increasing the flexibility of the device.
As one illustrative example, using a switching device between several vpp capacitors, it is possible to adjust the capacitance properties of a bank of VPP capacitors by forming parallel or serial connections between stackable banks of the same or different area sized VPP capacitors. In the invention, the capacitance properties can be fine tuned after the buildup of the device, in the field.
Referring to
In order to minimize the reliability risk, the large VPP bank may be stacked together to share the total applied electrical field. For such stacked approach, not only the actual electrical field on each VPP block will be divided, but also the performance (total capacitance will be increased after one VPP bank fails) and the reliability margin will be enhanced. As the stacked structure can tolerate two or three breakdowns, if not more, the time to failure of stacked VPP can now be determined by the second or the third breakdown times (longer time-to-fail), therefore, both the breakdown time statistical distribution (successive breakdown statistics) and overall time-to-fail will be significantly improved as shown in
More specifically,
Still referring to
By way of one illustration shown in
C
Bank1
=C
Bank2
=N*C
BLOCK, where,
CBank1 is the capacitance value of the blocks in bank 1,
CBank2 is the capacitance value of the blocks in bank 2,
“N” is the number VPP blocks for each bank, and
“CBLOCK” is the capacitance value for each VPP block.
However, when a different number of VPP blocks or different sized VPP blocks are associated with any of the banks, the equation reduces to CBank=N*CBLOCK.
By way of further illustration, using the example of
C
total=1/n*CBank.
By grounding pad 3 and biasing pad 1 and pad 2, the resultant capacitance configuration will be in parallel connection. This can be represented by the following equation:
C
total
=n*C
Bank.
With these examples, as should be understood by those of skill in the art, the capacitance value of the device can now be programmed by biasing and grounding certain pads in order to achieve serial and/or parallel connections between the banks of VPP blocks. Also, by using different combinations of connections, area sizes of capacitors, different links via the switches and/fuses, stacking VPP banks, and combinations thereof, it is possible, in accordance with the invention, to provide added flexibility to the device, via the capability of adjusting or programming the capacitance values, to certain design parameters.
It should be further understood that the invention is not limited to the adjustment or programmability of VPP capacitors. The use of capacitors is only one non-limiting illustratively embodiment. Accordingly, within the spirit of this invention, other passive devices such as, for example, resistors, inductors, etc. may also be stacked and linked using the same inventive concepts described herein.
In the configuration of
By way of one illustrative non-limiting example, the e-fuse may be closed before programming and opened post programming; whereas, the e-anti-fuse may be opened before programming and closed post programming. Using such example, one program may open the e-fuse at a lower bias and another program may close the e-anti-fuse by blowing the fuse at a higher bias. In this manner, two sets of programming levels can be accomplished using the invention.
As shown in
The following equations numerically show the relations of the above graphs. These equations can also be used to calculate the optimal configuration, e.g., longest time to failure.
βk is the fail point distribution, k is the number of stacked VPP capacitors, β1 is the time of failure for a single VPP capacitor, S is the area scaling, As is the total area of a stressed VPP capacitor, Ap is the total area of a real product, t63-use is the median time to fail at usage conditions, t63-1st is the time to fail for a first and last VPP capacitor in a stack, tk-delay is the time to fail based on a delay (time difference between number of stacked VPP capacitors), γ is a voltage acceleration factor, Vstress is voltage at stress level, and Vuse is voltage at use condition.
While the invention has been described in terms of various embodiments, those skilled in the art will recognize that the invention can be practiced with modification and still remain within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
The present application is a continuation application of co-pending U.S. application Ser. No. 11/161,932, filed on Aug. 23, 2005, the contents of which are incorporated by reference in its entirety herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 11161932 | Aug 2005 | US |
Child | 13529557 | US |