SPRADI9 June 2024 AM623 , AM625
Electro-migration failures are generally recognized to follow the Log-normal statistical reliability distribution with acceleration factors following Black’s Law. The parameters are such that the instantaneous failure rate increases with time, reflective of the latest stage of the bathtub curve. It is beneficial to first describe Black’s Law in basic form, then proceed to the Lognormal CDF. The fundamental CDF equation for EM Lognormal failures is in Equation 4.
In Equation 5,
The terms summed from i=1 to N (behind Σ) require further explanation. Ea and n are are the Black’s Law parameters, previously described. The numerator term t1 refers to time at an application use condition tier in the mission profile. For example, t1 can represent 20000 POH at 95°C Tj, at some operating some application voltage and frequency (an Operating Performance Point, or OPP, within data sheet specifications).
Another case:
can be 50000 POH at 95°C Tj, and this can be at the same or a different OPP allowed within TI data sheet compared to (Tref, Vref, fref). The times for each tier must be scaled, either up or down, relative to the equivalent time at the reference condition. Finally, these scaled times must be summed for the entire mission profile (all appliation use tiers).
We have described the (Electro-migration) reliability of a single wire or via (component) up to now. How, then, is the total reliability for the SoC calculated? Mathematically, this is relatively straightforward.
Use the identity for the Reliability function:
where F is the CDF, described previously.
If there are N total components, then the total Reliability function the overall product of each individual component's Reliability function:
Finally, the total CDF is 1 minus the total Reliability:
The Standard Normal CDF also has a convenient mathematical identity that can be used simply translation of F to R or vice versa. That identity is:
If
then
In Equation 4, the sign of z can be changed from positive to negative by taking the reciprocal of the argument of the natural logarithm.