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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Process Window Challenges in Advanced Manufacturing: New Materials and Integration Solutions

Fox, Robert, Augur, Rod, Child, Craig, Zaleski, Mark 22 July 2016 (has links) (PDF)
With the continued progression of Moore’s law into the sub-14nm technology nodes, interconnect RC and power dissipation scaling play an increasingly important role in overall product performance. As critical dimensions in the mainstream Cu/ULK interconnect system shrink below 30nm, corresponding increases in relative process variation and decreases in overall process window mandate increasingly complex integrated solutions. Traditional metallization processes, e.g. PVD barrier and seed layers, no longer scale for all layout configurations as they reach physical and geometric limitations. Interactions between design, OPC, and patterning also play more and more critical roles with respect to reliability and yield in volume manufacturing; stated simply, scaling is no longer “business as usual”. Restricted design layouts, prescriptive design rules, novel materials, and holistic integration solutions each therefore become necessary to maximize available process windows, thus enabling new generations of cost-competitive products in the marketplace.
2

Approche holistique du contrôle du focus en photolithographie 193nm immersion pour les niveaux critiques en 28nm et 14nm FD-SOI / A holistic approach of focus control for 193nm immersion lithography for critical layers in 28nm and 14nm FD-SOI technologies

Simiz, Jean-Gabriel 24 November 2016 (has links)
La complexification des intégrations sur les puces électroniques et la course à la miniaturisation sont les deux moteurs actuels de la microélectronique. Les limites optiques de la lithographie sont déjà atteintes depuis longtemps. Ainsi, la fabrication doit aussi être contrôlée de plus en plus étroitement afin d’éviter des variabilités qui nuiraient au bon fonctionnement du produit. Cette thèse présente une approche holistique du contrôle d’un des paramètres les plus importants de la photolithographie : le focus. Celui-ci est directement lié à la qualité de l’image transférée dans la résine photosensible pendant l’exposition. Son contrôle est donc primordial. Les sources de variabilités du focus sur le wafer sont multiples et diverses mais le cas particulier de la topographie du substrat a été privilégié dans cette étude. L’approche holistique de cet effet en particulier a conduit à l’utilisation d’outils de « data mining » telle la régression par la méthode des moindres carrés partiels qui a permis de pointer les principales causes de cette topographie, de créer un modèle prédictif de la topologie mais aussi d’évaluer des solutions d’améliorations comme l’amélioration des corrections qu’effectue le scanner permettant un meilleur contrôle généralisé de toutes les technologies sans toutefois changer l’intégration et le design ou encore la mise en place d’une méthode qui permet d’évaluer les erreurs de focus sur le wafer sans pour autant avoir recours à des mesures intensives sur silicium. D’autres solutions permettent de corriger les facteurs de risques à la source en modifiant le design afin de limiter la formation de la topologie de surface / The increasing complexity in chip integration (co-integration, increasing diversity of matérials…) and the race to dimension shrinkage are the two main drivers of research in microelectronics today. The optical limitations of lithography have been reached some years ago so that double patterning is now a typical process flow in production and helps reducing pattern size and increasing design density. Because of these, the manufacturing itself needs to be more tightly controlled in order to avoid marginalities. Which will affect the chip operation. The cross-effects between these elements are more numerous and their ratio in the total budget is larger whereas the needs for tighter process control are rising. This thesis presents a holistic approach of the control of one of the main parameters for photolithography: focus. It is directly linked to the quality of the image transferred into the photoresist during exposure. Its control is then essential. Variability sources for focus are manifold and diverse: laser, mask, optical column, servo-controllers, wafer flatness, integration, design, substrate reflectivity, material quality etc. All these are added to each other, leading to the creation of defects which can be catastrophic such as shorts. The first objective of this work was to show current challenges raised by STMicroelectronics new technologies, specifically photolithography-wise and focus-wise. A budget breakdown of two critical processes (Metal line patterning in 28nm FD-SOI and Contact patterning for 14nm FD-SOI) has been established which gives the impact of every effect. The product layout effects were evaluated to represent up to 20% of the complete budget and 50% of its intra-chip component. Topography contributes to a large part of these effects and offline measurements showed up to 32nm 3s of height variation in a single field. This may lead to local defocuses of the same order of magnitude. The usable depth of field being about 60 to 70nm for the studied layers, it is clear that focus control is really tight here. The holistic approach of topology leaded to the use of data mining tooling as PLS regression (Partial least Square). It allowed the highlighting of main causes of topography, the creation of a predictive model of topology and the evaluation of several improvement solutions. One may distinguish “palliative” and “curative” solutions. In the first category, on may put scanner levelling improvements which might be effective for every technology without any modification to make on integration and design. The emulated wafer map methodology providing on-product focus non-uniformities without any measurements is also a solution for investigation. “Curative” solutions may concern the mitigation of risk factors by modifying the design topography built-up main factors
3

Further Applications of Reactive In-Mold Coating (IMC): Effect of Inhibitor and Carbon Nano-Particles

BHUYAN, MOHAMMAD SHAHAJAHAN KABIR 25 October 2018 (has links)
No description available.
4

Process Window Challenges in Advanced Manufacturing: New Materials and Integration Solutions

Fox, Robert, Augur, Rod, Child, Craig, Zaleski, Mark 22 July 2016 (has links)
With the continued progression of Moore’s law into the sub-14nm technology nodes, interconnect RC and power dissipation scaling play an increasingly important role in overall product performance. As critical dimensions in the mainstream Cu/ULK interconnect system shrink below 30nm, corresponding increases in relative process variation and decreases in overall process window mandate increasingly complex integrated solutions. Traditional metallization processes, e.g. PVD barrier and seed layers, no longer scale for all layout configurations as they reach physical and geometric limitations. Interactions between design, OPC, and patterning also play more and more critical roles with respect to reliability and yield in volume manufacturing; stated simply, scaling is no longer “business as usual”. Restricted design layouts, prescriptive design rules, novel materials, and holistic integration solutions each therefore become necessary to maximize available process windows, thus enabling new generations of cost-competitive products in the marketplace.
5

Opravy DPS s BGA a FC pouzdry / PCBs Repairs with BGA and FC Packages

Buřival, Tomáš January 2009 (has links)
Graduation thesis is specialized on dilemma of the integrated circuits with ball grid array. Chapter two describes several types of packages and confrontation of their characteristics. Chapter three considers possibilities of corrections these boards bedded with packages, mounting and demounting of these packages, method of camera control and also inspection of the soldering process. Chapter four attend to practical measuring of thermal profiles and their optimalization.
6

Electromagnetic Pulse Welding Process and Material Parameter Identification for High Speed Processes

Scheffler, Christian 14 July 2021 (has links)
Electromagnetic welding is an innovative, high-speed technology to manufacture mixed material joints. In this dissertation, an experimental-numerical method is presented to identify robust process windows of aluminum-copper and aluminum-steel compounds. The microstructural characteristics of these joints were investigated in detail. Moreover, an evaluation of the joint quality is presented and different numerical models were introduced for the simulation of macroscopic and microscopic effects. To improve the accuracy of the simulations, the strain rate sensitivity of the materials must be considered. For this purpose a high-speed setup for the identification of relevant viscoplastic material parameters, comprising an inverse evaluation strategy, was developed.
7

An Analysis of Microstructure and Corrosion Resistance in Underwater Friction Stir Welded 304L Stainless Steel

Clark, Tad Dee 30 June 2005 (has links) (PDF)
An effective procedure and parameter window was developed for underwater friction stir welding (UWFSW) 304L stainless steel with a PCBN tool. UWFSW produced statistically significant: increases in yield strengths, decreases in percent elongation. The ultimate tensile strength was found to be significantly higher at certain parameters. Although sigma was identified in the UWFSWs, a significant reduction of sigma was found in UWFSWs compared to ambient FSWs. The degree of sensitization in UWFSWs was evaluated using double loop EPR testing and oxalic acid electro-etched metallography. Results were compared to base metal, ambient FSW, and arc welds. Upper and lower sensitization localization bands were identified in the UWFSWs. Although higher sensitization levels were present in UWFSWs compared to the arc weld, ambient FSW, and heat treated base metals, the UWFSWs were found less susceptible to corrosion than arc welds due to the subsurface location of the sensitization bands. A SCC analysis of UWFSWs relative to base metal and arc weldments was performed. U-bends were exposed to two 3.5% NaCl cyclic immersion experiments at 21 °C and 63 °C for 1000 hours each. A tertiary test was conducted in a 25% NaCl boiling solution. The UWFSW u-bends were no more susceptible to SCC than base metal in the cyclic immersion tests. In the boiling NaCl test, the SCC of the UWFSWs showed significant improvement over the SCC of arc welds. Arc u-bends cracked entirely within the weld bead and HAZ, while SCC in the UWFSWs showed no cracking localization.

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