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Thermal Imaging Test Chip

Thermal Imaging Test Chip. Justin I. Quesnel 08/18/05. Outline. Objective Previous Work Chip Design Chip Test and Results Photos Q & A. Project Objective.

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Thermal Imaging Test Chip

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  1. Thermal Imaging Test Chip Justin I. Quesnel 08/18/05

  2. Outline • Objective • Previous Work • Chip Design • Chip Test and Results • Photos • Q & A

  3. Project Objective • To develop an ideal test structure to prove the theoretical limits of subsurface thermal imaging resolution with a Numerical Aperture Increasing Lens (NAIL).

  4. 100X objective Conventional State-of-the-art 10X w/NAIL Boston Univ. Numerical Aperture Increasing Lens (NAIL) background • Plano-convex lens of the same material • Silicon, n = 3.5 • Without a NAIL, 2.5um • With a NAIL, .73um • Lateral Resolution increase by a factor of n = 3.5

  5. Previous Work • First experiment with NAIL enhancement • Lateral Resolution of 1.4 um • Limitations • Feature size not fine enough • Electromigration • Unknown maximum current density • Environment not easily controlled/measured

  6. New Chip Requirements • Test structures • Different materials/emissivities • Crossing and vertical lines • Varying widths • Internally controlled excitation • Frequency and Pulse-width • Temperature Control

  7. Fabrication Sites • Tradeoffs • Cost vs. Feature Length • Proprietary Information • Submission Dates • Final Decision • AustriaMicrosystems • .35 um feature length • 4 metal layers, 2 poly

  8. Software • Cadence • Design and Electrical Simulation • Femlab • Thermal simulations

  9. Chip Overview • Chip Sections • Samples • Pulse Generator • Thermal Network • Passives • Specifications • 3.3mm x 3.3mm • ~37,000 transistors • 80 pins

  10. Sample Overview • Template • Test structures • M1-M4, P1,P2, Diffusion • Crossing, Vertical

  11. Sample – Test Structures • Test Structures • Varying Widths • Heating resistors • Thermal sensor

  12. Sample - Control • Transmission Gates • Digital Control Logic • Driving Transistors • Max Current Density • Operating Modes

  13. Pulse Generator • Frequency control • Pulse Width Modulation • Test/Bypass points

  14. Thermal Network • Temperature Sensing • Voltage and temperature are linear with a constant current • Biasing and sensing • Current Mirrors • Large mux for toggling between thermal sensors

  15. Advantage of Temperature Control • Voltage Controlled • Heating Resistors in parallel • Ambient temperature • Larger Blackbody Radiation

  16. Advantage of Pulsed Excitation • DC vs Pulsed • Varying Pulsewidth

  17. Fault Tolerance • Backup structures • Completely isolated • Test and Bypass points placed around chip

  18. Passive Structures • Microscope Calibration • All layers

  19. Pad Ring Design • Flip chip bonding • Special Constraints • Limited # of pins • Two Concentric Circles • Accessibility • Pad Design and Protection

  20. Chip Testing • Packaging • Dual Inline Packaged • Electrical Testing • Wirewrapped • Digital toggle switches • Sample<0:3> • First_res<0:3>, Second_res<0:3> • Mode_bits<0:1> • Enable and control bits • Analog

  21. Results • Sample - Test • Passive Resistor Testing • Toggling through samples and resistors • Active Resistor Testing • Exciting internally, viewing externally • Varying pulses • Exciting externally

  22. Results • Function Generator - Test • Ring Oscillator and Counter • Pulse-Width Modulator • Bypassed using external ICs • Test and Bypass Points

  23. Results • Temperature Network - Test • Individual diode • Varying voltage • ~5 Celsius delta • Diode network • Gradient detected • Susceptibility to neighbors • Heat sinks (~2C delta)

  24. Chip Testing Conclusion • All units functioning • Pulse width modulator is malfunctioning • Easily Bypassed with external IC • Ready for next phase • Flip-chip bonding on a PCB

  25. Near Infrared Images • Indium Gallium Arsenide Camera • 1200 nm LED array source

  26. Near Infrared Images • Metal 4 Sample View • Top Side • Obstructed view • Flipped

  27. Near Infrared Images • Top View of Metal 4 lines

  28. Near Infrared Images • Subsurface view of Calibrating Lines

  29. Future Work on Chip • Preparation for thermal imaging • Die polishing • Flip-Chip bonding • Thermal image data acquisition

  30. Limitations • Potential enhancements • Larger die = more IO Pins • More elaborate temperature network • Dedicated voltage control pins • Wider voltage control nets

  31. Summary • Thermal Test Chip • Consists of ~150 different resistive structures • Digitally Controlled • Controllable frequency/pulsewidth • Several Modes of operation • Temperature control • Testing and Results • Fully operational • Ready for thermal imaging

  32. Questions

  33. Near Infrared Images • Sub surface Analog Section • Current Mirrors and Opamp

  34. Near Infrared Images • Top Level Polysilicon Layer 1 Sample

  35. Near Infrared Images • Subsurface view - Digital Control • ~2500 transistors

  36. Near Infrared Images • Subsurface view Driving PMOS transistors

  37. Near Infrared Images • Subsurface view Frequency Control Unit

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