Q: Why does the Industry Council on ESD Target Levels advocate using SPICE-like circuit simulation to evaluate system-level ESD reliability [1]?
A: This is a time-saving alternative to first identifying problems at the time of ESD qualification testing and remedying those by an inefficient trial and error process. Using circuit simulation for virtual prototyping of system ESD reliability is referred to as system-efficient ESD design, or SEED [1].
Q: What are the roadblocks to system-level ESD simulation?
A: Suppliers of microelectronic components generally do not provide ESD models of their components.
Q: Have any workarounds been proposed?
A: It has been suggested that empirical models can be fit to TLP (transmission line pulse) I-V measurement data [1].
Q: How are those empirical models classified?
A: Most are piecewise linear models. More advanced non-linear models have also been investigated, such as recurrent neural networks.
To simulate system-level ESD, all of the microelectronic components along the discharge path must be modeled; these may include a transient voltage suppressor [2], ferrite choke [3], or other discrete components. This article focuses on integrated circuit components. If the ESD-induced voltage and current waveforms at the IC pins are simulated with reasonable accuracy, one can check whether the part will be driven outside its safe operating area or will suffer thermal failure [4][5]. Such an analysis is sufficient to determine whether the IC will avoid hard failure during ESD qualification testing.
Component response to ESD is often assessed using transmission line pulse (TLP) testing [6]. The pulse I-V curve should be measured in both the power-off and power-on states, which necessitates that the device under test, i.e. the IC, be mounted on a test board with a power supply. Ref. [7] contains an example test board design. Typically, the pulse I-V curve is fit to a piecewise linear model [8]. The resulting model is a static model because an I-V curve does not provide information about the dynamic response of the device under test.
If the IC’s transient response is linear then, in principle, the static model can be augmented with a transient model obtained from S-parameter measurements. In many cases, the transient ESD response of an IC is dominated by the parasitic inductive and capacitive elements of the package. In such cases, it may not be necessary to do any measurements to obtain the transient model, because the IBIS model provided by many IC suppliers includes a description of the package. The piecewise linear model obtained from TLP measurements and the RLC package model can be connected together to form a complete ESD model of the component [7], as illustrated in Figure 1.
A component model that is comprised of a static I-V model plus a package model well predicts the IC’s transient response to the square-shaped current pulse produced by a TLP tester in many cases, but not all [7]. That finding suggests that the dynamic, nonlinear response of the on-chip semiconductor devices is not always obscured by the dynamic response of the package impedances.
It is very challenging to create an accurate model of a chip’s dynamic response to ESD on the basis of measurement data, i.e., the measured transient response of the packaged IC to ESD-type current pulses, in part because one cannot place probes precisely at the IC inputs when the IC is mounted on a circuit board. The IC designer can more easily create the component ESD model. The designer’s model would consist of the chip netlist, along with compact models of the devices; see, for example, [9]. However, IC suppliers are reluctant to provide such models to their customers because those could disclose intellectual property (IP). It is worthwhile to consider whether the accurate transient model can be reformulated as an IP-obscuring behavioral model. One such candidate model is the recurrent neural network.
A recurrent neural network (“RNN”) is a universal approximator for nonlinear state space systems; such systems are described by ordinary differential equations. An RNN is especially well suited for processing time series data, such as those provided by laboratory instruments or circuit simulators. The RNN model of an IC IO pin is formulated as
The input, u, may be either current or voltage, and the output y is the other quantity, i.e. voltage or current. Wr, Wu, Wy , bu and by are the model parameters. x denotes the internal states of the system. For example, if the system being modeled is a single diode, the variable mapping might be voltage as u, stored charge as x, and current as y. In actuality, the user does not specify a mapping from a physical quantity to the RNN model’s internal state; instead, the internal state is “learned” from data and need not correspond to an identifiable physical quantity. Figure 2 provides a pictorial view of an RNN.
RNN models can be implemented in Verilog-A [10] and then simulated using commercial circuit simulators, such as ADS, HSPICE and Spectre.
To illustrate the feasibility of transient behavioral modeling, training data were generated by simulating the netlist for a full-chip ESD protection network. Using those data, an RNN model of the circuit was derived using open-source optimization software. Figure 3 shows simulation results obtained using both the netlist description of the circuit and the RNN model. The error associated with the behavioral model is small, less than 3%. One should note that the stimulus applied to the circuit in the simulation of Figure 3 was not included in the training data. It is important to demonstrate that a behavioral model is generalizable, i.e., that it predicts the correct behavior in response to previously unseen stimuli.
Although the benefits of a transient behavioral model are clear, more work is needed to determine whether an RNN is the most suitable model for representing a component’s ESD response. Although the RNN is considered a “universal” model, it presents some difficulties, e.g., one must ensure that the learned network is stable for all input stimuli.
TLP provides a one-port I-V measurement, and therefore a model that is extracted from TLP I-V measurement data is a one-port model. It is important to note that the pulse I-V curve measured at an IC pin does not only describe the IC; instead, it describes the combined effect of the IC and the board-level current path(s). Current that flows into an IO pin of an IC divides among the possible return paths in a proportion that is affected by the impedance of the board-level power delivery network (PDN) [11]. Therefore, as shown in Figure 4, the I-V characteristic measured at an IC pin is affected by the board PDN impedance. If multi-port ESD models of components are substituted for the one-port models used today, the full effect of a system’s circuit board can be captured in simulation. Even if the PDN impedance is so low that the board has negligible effect on the measured I-V, a multi-port model of the IC may be needed for soft failure analysis.
During qualification testing, about half of system-level ESD failures are soft failures [1]. Many of those failures are due to noise (“glitches”) that appears at IO pins, a result of magnetic coupling between bond-wires or package traces [12]. A time-domain electromagnetic simulator can perform noise coupling analysis. Assume that the ESD current enters the IC primarily at a signal pin; the on-chip protection network will shunt the ESD current back to the package (and then the board). Therefore, it is the on-chip circuits that determine which combination of package bond-wires or traces constitute the return paths, and noise coupling simulation at the package level should comprehend the effects of the chip. EM simulators do not provide such capability, but a hybrid EM-circuit simulator can be used. In [13], the Speed2000 simulator was used to simulate ESD-induced noise coupling to signal lines inside an IC package; sample results are shown in Figure 5.
Over the past 5 or 6 years, industry and university researchers have advanced the state of the art in system-level ESD simulation, and this article provided an overview of some of those activities. Much work remains to be done to establish repeatable and accurate methods to characterize component response to system-level ESD, and to achieve consensus as to the most suitable model structure.
The authors acknowledge the support of the Center for Advanced Electronics through Machine Learning (CAEML) and the National Science Foundation (under CNS 16-24811).
References
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Founded in 1982, EOS/ESD Association, Inc. is a not for profit, professional organization, dedicated to education and furthering the technology Electrostatic Discharge (ESD) control and prevention. EOS/ESD Association, Inc. sponsors educational programs, develops ESD control and measurement standards, holds international technical symposiums, workshops, tutorials, and foster the exchange of technical information among its members and others.
Dr. Rosenbaum has authored or co-authored nearly 200 technical papers; she has been an editor for IEEE Transactions on Device and Materials Reliability and IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices. She was the recipient of a Best Student Paper Award from the IEDM, Outstanding and Best Paper Awards from the EOS/ESD Symposium, a Technical Excellence Award from the SRC, an NSF CAREER award, an IBM Faculty Award, and the ESD Association’s Industry Pioneer Recognition Award. She is a Fellow of the IEEE.