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High-temperature operating life

High-temperature operating life (HTOL) is a reliability test applied to integrated circuits (ICs) to determine their intrinsic reliability. This test stresses the IC at an elevated temperature, high voltage and dynamic operation for a predefined period of time. The IC is usually monitored under stress and tested at intermediate intervals. This reliability stress test is sometimes referred to as a "lifetime test", "device life test" or "extended burn in test" and is used to trigger potential failure modes and assess IC lifetime.

There are several types of HTOL:

HTOL Types Schematic Description
Static
IC stressed at static and constant conditions, IC not toggling.
Dynamic
Input stimulus for toggling the internal nodes of the device.
Monitored
Input stimulus for toggling the internal nodes of the device. Live output indicates IC performance.
In-situ tested
Input stimulus for toggling the internal nodes of the device. Responsive output tests IC performance.
  • AEC Documents.[1]
  • JEDEC Standards.[2]
  • Mil standards.[3]

Design considerations

The main aim of the HTOL is to age the device such that a short experiment will allow the lifetime of the IC to be predicted (e.g. 1,000 HTOL hours shall predict a minimum of "X" years of operation). Good HTOL process shall avoid relaxed HTOL operation and also prevents overstressing the IC. This method ages all IC's building blocks to allow relevant failure modes to be triggered and implemented in a short reliability experiment. A precise multiplier, known as the Acceleration Factor (AF) simulates long lifetime operation.

The AF represents the accelerated aging factor relative to the useful life application conditions.

For effective HTOL stress testing, several variables should be considered:

  1. Digital toggling factor
  2. Analog modules operation
  3. I/O ring activity
  4. Monitor design
  5. Ambient temperature (Ta)
  6. Junction temperature (Tj)
  7. Voltage stress (Vstrs)
  8. Acceleration factor (AF)
  9. Test duration (t)
  10. Sample size (SS)

A detailed description of the above variables, using a hypothetical, simplified IC with several RAMs, digital logic, an analog voltage regulator module and I/O ring, together with the HTOL design considerations for each are provided below.

Digital toggling factor

The digital toggling factor (DTF) represents the number of transistors that change their state during the stress test, relative to the total number of gates in the digital portion of the IC. In effect, the DTF is the percentage of transistors toggling in one time unit. The time unit is relative to the toggling frequency, and is usually limited by the HTOL setup to be in the range of 10–20Mhz.

Reliability engineers strive to toggle as many as possible transistors for each time unit of measure. The RAMs (and other memory types) are usually activated using the BIST function, while the logic is usually activated with the SCAN function, LFSR or logic BIST.

The power and the self-heating of the digital portion of the IC are evaluated and the device's aging estimated. These two measures are aligned so that they are similar to the aging of other elements of the IC. The degrees of freedom for aligning these measures are the voltage stress and/or the time period during which the HTOL program loops these blocks relative to other IC blocks.

Analog modules operation

The recent trend of integrating as many electronic components as possible into a single chip is known as system on a chip (SoC).

This trend complicates reliability engineers' work because (usually) the analog portion of the chip dissipates higher power relative to the other IC elements.

This higher power may generate hot spots and areas of accelerated aging. Reliability engineers must understand the power distribution on the chip and align the aging so that it is similar for all elements of an IC.

In our hypothetical SoC the analog module only includes a voltage regulator. In reality, there may be additional analog modules e.g. PMIC, oscillators, or charge pumps. To perform efficient stress tests on the analog elements, reliability engineers must identify the worst-case scenario for the relevant analog blocks in the IC. For example, the worst-case scenario for voltage regulators may be the maximum regulation voltage and maximum load current; for charge pumps it may be the minimum supply voltage and maximum load current.

Good engineering practice calls for the use of external loads (external R,L,C) to force the necessary currents. This practice avoids loading differences due to the chip's different operational schemes and operation trimming of its analog parts.

Statistical methods are used to check statistical tolerances, variation and temperature stability of the loads used, and to define the right confidence bands for the loads to avoid over/under stress at HTOL operating range. The degrees of freedom for aligning the aging magnitude of analog parts is usually the duty-cycle, external load values and voltage stress.

I/O ring activity

The interface between the "outside world" and the IC is made via the input/output (I/O) ring. This ring contains power I/O ports, digital I/O ports and analog I/O ports. The I/Os are (usually) wired via the IC package to the "outside world" and each I/O executes its own specific command instructions, e.g. JTAG ports, IC power supply ports etc. Reliability engineering aims to age all I/Os in the same way as the other IC elements. This can be achieved by using a Boundary scan operation.

Monitor design

As previously mentioned, the main aim of the HTOL is aging the samples by dynamic stress at elevated voltage and/or temperature. During the HTOL operation, we need to assure that the IC is active, toggling and constantly functioning.

At the same time, we need to know at what point the IC stops responding, these data are important for calculating price reliability indices and for facilitating the FA. This is done by monitoring the device via one or more vital IC parameters signals communicated and logged by the HTOL machine and providing continuous indication about the IC's functionality throughout the HTOL run time. Examples of commonly used monitors include the BIST "done" flag signal, the SCAN output chain or the analog module output.

There are three types of monitoring:

  1. Pattern matching: The actual output signal is compared to the expected one and alerts about any deviation. The main disadvantage of this monitor type is its sensitivity to any minor deviation from the expected signal. During the HTOL, the IC runs at a temperature and/or voltages that occasionally fall outside its specification, which may cause artificial sensitivity and/or a malfunction that fails the matching but is not a real failure.
  2. Activity: Counts the number of toggles and if the results are higher than a predefined threshold the monitor indicates OK. The main disadvantage of this type of monitoring is the chance that unexpected noise or signal could be wrongly interpreted. This issue arises mainly in the case of low count toggling monitor.
  3. Activity within a predefine range: Checks that the monitor responds within a predefined limit, for example when then number of toggles is within a predefined limit or the output of the voltage regulator is within a predefined range.

Ambient temperature (Ta)

According to JEDEC standards, the environmental chamber should be capable of maintaining the specified temperature within a tolerance of ±5 °C throughout while parts are loaded and unpowered. Today's environmental chambers have better capabilities and can exhibit temperature stability within a range of ±3 °C throughout.

Junction temperature (Tj)

Low power ICs can be stressed without major attention to self-heating effects. However, due to technology scaling and manufacturing variations, power dissipation within a single production lot of devices can vary by as much as 40%. This variation, in addition to high power IC makes advanced contact temperature controls necessary for facilitating individual control systems for each IC

Voltage stress (Vstrs)

The operating voltage should be at least the maximum specified for the device. In some cases a higher voltage is applied to obtain lifetime acceleration from voltage as well as temperature.

To define the maximum permitted voltage stress, the following methods can be considered:

  1. Force 80% of breakdown voltage;
  2. Force six-sigma less than the breakdown voltage;
  3. Set the overvoltage to be higher than the maximum specified voltage. An overvoltage level of 140% of the maximum voltage is occasionally used for MIL and automotive applications.

Reliability engineers must check that Vstress does not exceed the maximum rated voltage for the relevant technology, as specified by the FAB.

Acceleration factor (AF)

The Acceleration factor (AF) is a multiplier that relates a product's life at an accelerated stress level to the life at the use stress level.

An AF of 20 means 1 hour at stress condition is equivalent to 20 hours at useful condition.

The voltage acceleration factor is represented by AFv. Usually the stress voltage is equal to or higher than the maximum voltage. An elevated voltage provides additional acceleration and can be used to increase effective device hours or achieve an equivalent life point.

There are several AFv models:

  1. E model or the constant field/voltage acceleration exponential model;
  2. 1/E model or, equivalently, the anode hole injection model;
  3. V model, where the failure rate is exponential to voltage
  4. Anode hydrogen release for the power-law model

AFtemp is the acceleration factor due to changes in temperature and is usually based on the Arrhenius equation. The total acceleration factor is the product of AFv and AFtemp

Test duration (t)

The reliability test duration assures the device's adequate lifetime requirement.

For example, with an activation energy of 0.7 eV, 125 °C stress temperature and 55 °C use temperature, the acceleration factor (Arrhenius equation) is 78.6. This means that 1,000 hours' stress duration is equivalent to 9 years of use. The reliability engineer decides on the qualification test duration. Industry good practice calls for 1,000 hours at a junction temperature of 125 °C.

Sample size (SS)

The challenge for new reliability assessment and qualification systems is determining the relevant failure mechanisms to optimize sample size.

Sample plans are statistically derived from manufacturer risk, consumer risk, and the expected failure rate. The commonly used sampling plan of zero rejects out of 230 samples is equal to three rejects out of 668 samples assuming LTPD =1 and a 90% confidence interval.

HTOL policy

Sample selection

Samples shall include representative samples from at least three nonconsecutive lots to represent manufacturing variability. All test samples shall be fabricated, handled, screened and assembled in the same way as during the production phase.

Sample preparation

Samples shall be tested prior to stress and at predefined checkpoints. It is good engineering practice to test samples at maximum and minimum rating temperatures as well as at room temperature. Data logs of all functional and parametric tests shall be collated for further analysis.

Test duration

Assuming Tj = 125 °C, commonly used checkpoints are after 48, 168, 500 and 1,000 hours.

Different checkpoints for different temperatures can be calculated by using the Arrhenius equation. For example, with an activation energy of 0.7e V, Tj of 135°C and Tuse of 55 °C the equivalent checkpoints will be at 29, 102, 303 and 606 hours.

Electrical testing should be completed as soon as possible after the samples are removed. If the samples cannot be tested soon after their removal, additional stress time should be applied. The JEDEC standard requires samples be tested within 168 hours of removal.

If testing exceeds the recommended time window, additional stress should be applied according to the table below:[2]

Time above recommended time window 0h < h ≤ 168h 168h < h ≤ 336h 336h < h ≤ 504h Other
Additional stress hours 24h 48h 72h 24 hours for each 168 hours

Merit numbers

The merit number is the outcome of statistical sampling plans.

Sampling plans are inputted to SENTENCE, an audit tool, to ensure that the output of a process meets the requirements. SENTENCE simply accepts or rejects the tested lots. The reliability engineer implements statistical sampling plans based on predefined Acceptance Quality Limits, LTPD, manufacturer risk and customer risk. For example, the commonly used sampling plan of 0 rejects out of 230 samples is equal to 3 rejects out of 668 samples assuming LTPD=1.

HTOL in various industries

The aging process of an IC is relative to its standard use conditions. The tables below provide reference to various commonly used products and the conditions under which they are used.

Reliability engineers are tasked with verifying the adequate stress duration. For example, for an activation energy of 0.7eV, a stress temperature of 125 °C and a use temperature of 55 °C, an expected operational life of five years is represented by a 557-hour HTOL experiment.

Commercial use

Min Tuse Max Tuse Description Expected life time
5 °C 50 °C desktop products 5 years
0 °C 70 °C mobile products 4 years

Automotive use

Example Automotive Use Conditions[1]

Min Tuse Max Tuse Description Expected life time
−40 °C 105—150 °C under hood condition 10 to 15 years
−40 °C 80 °C passenger compartment condition 10 to 15 years
0 °C 70 °C passenger compartment condition 10 to 15 years

Telecommunication use

Example European Telecom use Conditions definition

Min Tuse Max Tuse Description Expected life time
5 °C 40 °C class 3.1 Temperature-controlled locations usually 25 years
−5 °C 45 °C class 3.2 Partly temperature-controlled locations usually 25 years
−25 °C 55 °C class 3.3 Not temperature-controlled locations usually 25 years
−40 °C 70 °C class 3.4 Sites with heat-trap usually 25 years
−40 °C 40 °C class 3.5 Sheltered locations, Direct solar radiation usually 25 years

Example US Telecom use conditions definition

Min Tuse Max Tuse Description Expected life time
−40 °C 46 °C Uncontrolled environment 25 years
5 °C 40 °C Enclosed building 25 years

Military use

Example military use conditions

Min Tuse Max Tuse Description
−55 °C 125 °C MIL products
−55 °C up to 225 °C high-temp applications

Example

Number of Failures = r

Number of Devicesfailures = D

Test Hours per Device = H

Celsius + 273 = T (Calculation Temperature in Kelvin)

Test Temperature (HTRB or other burn-in temperature)=  

Use Temperature (standardized at 55°C or 328°K) =  

Activation Energy (eV) =  

  Chi Squared/2 is the probability estimation for number of failures at α and ν

Confidence Level for X^2 distribution; reliability calculations use α=60% or .60 = α (alpha)
Degrees of Freedom for   distribution; reliability calculations use ν=2r + 2. = ν (nu)

Acceleration Factor from the Arrhenius equation =  

Boltzmann's Constant (  ) = 8.617 x 10e-5 eV/°K

Device Hours (DH) = D x H

Equivalent Device Hours (EDH) = D x H x  

Failure Rate per hour =  

Failures in Time = Failure Rate per billion hours = FIT =  

Mean Time to Failure = MTTF


Where the Acceleration Factor from the Arrhenius equation is:  

Failure Rate per hour =  

Failures in Time = Failure Rate per billion hours = FIT =  

Mean Time to Failure in hours =  

Mean Time to Failure in years=  ´

In case you want to calculate the acceleration factor including the Humidity the so-called Highly accelerated stress test (HAST), then:

the Acceleration Factor from the Arrhenius equation would be:  

where   is the stress test relative humidity (in percentage). Typically is 85%.

where   is the typical use relative humidity (in percentage). Typically this is measured at the chip surface ca. 10–20%.

where   is the failure mechanism scale factor. Which is a value between 0.1 and 0.15.

In case you want to calculate the acceleration factor including the Humidity (HAST) and voltage stress then:

the Acceleration Factor from the Arrhenius equation would be:  

where   is the stress voltage (in volts). Typically is the VCCx1.4 volts. e.g. 1.8x1.4=2.52 volts.

where   is the typical usage voltage or VCC (in volts). Typically VCC is 1.8v. Depending on the design.

where   is the failure mechanism scale factor. Which is a value between 0 and 3.0. Typically 0.5 for Silican junction defect.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b AEC Documents
  2. ^ a b JEDEC Standard
  3. ^ Mil standard 24 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  • siliconfareast
  • Reliability Hotwire eMagazine
  • SEMATECH Handbook

high, temperature, operating, life, htol, reliability, test, applied, integrated, circuits, determine, their, intrinsic, reliability, this, test, stresses, elevated, temperature, high, voltage, dynamic, operation, predefined, period, time, usually, monitored, . High temperature operating life HTOL is a reliability test applied to integrated circuits ICs to determine their intrinsic reliability This test stresses the IC at an elevated temperature high voltage and dynamic operation for a predefined period of time The IC is usually monitored under stress and tested at intermediate intervals This reliability stress test is sometimes referred to as a lifetime test device life test or extended burn in test and is used to trigger potential failure modes and assess IC lifetime There are several types of HTOL HTOL Types Schematic DescriptionStatic IC stressed at static and constant conditions IC not toggling Dynamic Input stimulus for toggling the internal nodes of the device Monitored Input stimulus for toggling the internal nodes of the device Live output indicates IC performance In situ tested Input stimulus for toggling the internal nodes of the device Responsive output tests IC performance AEC Documents 1 JEDEC Standards 2 Mil standards 3 Contents 1 Design considerations 1 1 Digital toggling factor 1 2 Analog modules operation 1 3 I O ring activity 1 4 Monitor design 1 5 Ambient temperature Ta 1 6 Junction temperature Tj 1 7 Voltage stress Vstrs 1 8 Acceleration factor AF 1 9 Test duration t 1 10 Sample size SS 2 HTOL policy 2 1 Sample selection 2 2 Sample preparation 2 3 Test duration 2 4 Merit numbers 3 HTOL in various industries 3 1 Commercial use 3 2 Automotive use 3 3 Telecommunication use 3 4 Military use 3 5 Example 4 See also 5 ReferencesDesign considerations EditThe main aim of the HTOL is to age the device such that a short experiment will allow the lifetime of the IC to be predicted e g 1 000 HTOL hours shall predict a minimum of X years of operation Good HTOL process shall avoid relaxed HTOL operation and also prevents overstressing the IC This method ages all IC s building blocks to allow relevant failure modes to be triggered and implemented in a short reliability experiment A precise multiplier known as the Acceleration Factor AF simulates long lifetime operation The AF represents the accelerated aging factor relative to the useful life application conditions For effective HTOL stress testing several variables should be considered Digital toggling factor Analog modules operation I O ring activity Monitor design Ambient temperature Ta Junction temperature Tj Voltage stress Vstrs Acceleration factor AF Test duration t Sample size SS A detailed description of the above variables using a hypothetical simplified IC with several RAMs digital logic an analog voltage regulator module and I O ring together with the HTOL design considerations for each are provided below Digital toggling factor Edit The digital toggling factor DTF represents the number of transistors that change their state during the stress test relative to the total number of gates in the digital portion of the IC In effect the DTF is the percentage of transistors toggling in one time unit The time unit is relative to the toggling frequency and is usually limited by the HTOL setup to be in the range of 10 20Mhz Reliability engineers strive to toggle as many as possible transistors for each time unit of measure The RAMs and other memory types are usually activated using the BIST function while the logic is usually activated with the SCAN function LFSR or logic BIST The power and the self heating of the digital portion of the IC are evaluated and the device s aging estimated These two measures are aligned so that they are similar to the aging of other elements of the IC The degrees of freedom for aligning these measures are the voltage stress and or the time period during which the HTOL program loops these blocks relative to other IC blocks Analog modules operation Edit The recent trend of integrating as many electronic components as possible into a single chip is known as system on a chip SoC This trend complicates reliability engineers work because usually the analog portion of the chip dissipates higher power relative to the other IC elements This higher power may generate hot spots and areas of accelerated aging Reliability engineers must understand the power distribution on the chip and align the aging so that it is similar for all elements of an IC In our hypothetical SoC the analog module only includes a voltage regulator In reality there may be additional analog modules e g PMIC oscillators or charge pumps To perform efficient stress tests on the analog elements reliability engineers must identify the worst case scenario for the relevant analog blocks in the IC For example the worst case scenario for voltage regulators may be the maximum regulation voltage and maximum load current for charge pumps it may be the minimum supply voltage and maximum load current Good engineering practice calls for the use of external loads external R L C to force the necessary currents This practice avoids loading differences due to the chip s different operational schemes and operation trimming of its analog parts Statistical methods are used to check statistical tolerances variation and temperature stability of the loads used and to define the right confidence bands for the loads to avoid over under stress at HTOL operating range The degrees of freedom for aligning the aging magnitude of analog parts is usually the duty cycle external load values and voltage stress I O ring activity Edit The interface between the outside world and the IC is made via the input output I O ring This ring contains power I O ports digital I O ports and analog I O ports The I Os are usually wired via the IC package to the outside world and each I O executes its own specific command instructions e g JTAG ports IC power supply ports etc Reliability engineering aims to age all I Os in the same way as the other IC elements This can be achieved by using a Boundary scan operation Monitor design Edit As previously mentioned the main aim of the HTOL is aging the samples by dynamic stress at elevated voltage and or temperature During the HTOL operation we need to assure that the IC is active toggling and constantly functioning At the same time we need to know at what point the IC stops responding these data are important for calculating price reliability indices and for facilitating the FA This is done by monitoring the device via one or more vital IC parameters signals communicated and logged by the HTOL machine and providing continuous indication about the IC s functionality throughout the HTOL run time Examples of commonly used monitors include the BIST done flag signal the SCAN output chain or the analog module output There are three types of monitoring Pattern matching The actual output signal is compared to the expected one and alerts about any deviation The main disadvantage of this monitor type is its sensitivity to any minor deviation from the expected signal During the HTOL the IC runs at a temperature and or voltages that occasionally fall outside its specification which may cause artificial sensitivity and or a malfunction that fails the matching but is not a real failure Activity Counts the number of toggles and if the results are higher than a predefined threshold the monitor indicates OK The main disadvantage of this type of monitoring is the chance that unexpected noise or signal could be wrongly interpreted This issue arises mainly in the case of low count toggling monitor Activity within a predefine range Checks that the monitor responds within a predefined limit for example when then number of toggles is within a predefined limit or the output of the voltage regulator is within a predefined range Ambient temperature Ta Edit According to JEDEC standards the environmental chamber should be capable of maintaining the specified temperature within a tolerance of 5 C throughout while parts are loaded and unpowered Today s environmental chambers have better capabilities and can exhibit temperature stability within a range of 3 C throughout Junction temperature Tj Edit Low power ICs can be stressed without major attention to self heating effects However due to technology scaling and manufacturing variations power dissipation within a single production lot of devices can vary by as much as 40 This variation in addition to high power IC makes advanced contact temperature controls necessary for facilitating individual control systems for each IC Voltage stress Vstrs Edit The operating voltage should be at least the maximum specified for the device In some cases a higher voltage is applied to obtain lifetime acceleration from voltage as well as temperature To define the maximum permitted voltage stress the following methods can be considered Force 80 of breakdown voltage Force six sigma less than the breakdown voltage Set the overvoltage to be higher than the maximum specified voltage An overvoltage level of 140 of the maximum voltage is occasionally used for MIL and automotive applications Reliability engineers must check that Vstress does not exceed the maximum rated voltage for the relevant technology as specified by the FAB Acceleration factor AF Edit The Acceleration factor AF is a multiplier that relates a product s life at an accelerated stress level to the life at the use stress level An AF of 20 means 1 hour at stress condition is equivalent to 20 hours at useful condition The voltage acceleration factor is represented by AFv Usually the stress voltage is equal to or higher than the maximum voltage An elevated voltage provides additional acceleration and can be used to increase effective device hours or achieve an equivalent life point There are several AFv models E model or the constant field voltage acceleration exponential model 1 E model or equivalently the anode hole injection model V model where the failure rate is exponential to voltage Anode hydrogen release for the power law modelAFtemp is the acceleration factor due to changes in temperature and is usually based on the Arrhenius equation The total acceleration factor is the product of AFv and AFtemp Test duration t Edit The reliability test duration assures the device s adequate lifetime requirement For example with an activation energy of 0 7 eV 125 C stress temperature and 55 C use temperature the acceleration factor Arrhenius equation is 78 6 This means that 1 000 hours stress duration is equivalent to 9 years of use The reliability engineer decides on the qualification test duration Industry good practice calls for 1 000 hours at a junction temperature of 125 C Sample size SS Edit The challenge for new reliability assessment and qualification systems is determining the relevant failure mechanisms to optimize sample size Sample plans are statistically derived from manufacturer risk consumer risk and the expected failure rate The commonly used sampling plan of zero rejects out of 230 samples is equal to three rejects out of 668 samples assuming LTPD 1 and a 90 confidence interval HTOL policy EditSample selection Edit Samples shall include representative samples from at least three nonconsecutive lots to represent manufacturing variability All test samples shall be fabricated handled screened and assembled in the same way as during the production phase Sample preparation Edit Samples shall be tested prior to stress and at predefined checkpoints It is good engineering practice to test samples at maximum and minimum rating temperatures as well as at room temperature Data logs of all functional and parametric tests shall be collated for further analysis Test duration Edit Assuming Tj 125 C commonly used checkpoints are after 48 168 500 and 1 000 hours Different checkpoints for different temperatures can be calculated by using the Arrhenius equation For example with an activation energy of 0 7e V Tj of 135 C and Tuse of 55 C the equivalent checkpoints will be at 29 102 303 and 606 hours Electrical testing should be completed as soon as possible after the samples are removed If the samples cannot be tested soon after their removal additional stress time should be applied The JEDEC standard requires samples be tested within 168 hours of removal If testing exceeds the recommended time window additional stress should be applied according to the table below 2 Time above recommended time window 0h lt h 168h 168h lt h 336h 336h lt h 504h OtherAdditional stress hours 24h 48h 72h 24 hours for each 168 hoursMerit numbers Edit The merit number is the outcome of statistical sampling plans Sampling plans are inputted to SENTENCE an audit tool to ensure that the output of a process meets the requirements SENTENCE simply accepts or rejects the tested lots The reliability engineer implements statistical sampling plans based on predefined Acceptance Quality Limits LTPD manufacturer risk and customer risk For example the commonly used sampling plan of 0 rejects out of 230 samples is equal to 3 rejects out of 668 samples assuming LTPD 1 HTOL in various industries EditThe aging process of an IC is relative to its standard use conditions The tables below provide reference to various commonly used products and the conditions under which they are used Reliability engineers are tasked with verifying the adequate stress duration For example for an activation energy of 0 7eV a stress temperature of 125 C and a use temperature of 55 C an expected operational life of five years is represented by a 557 hour HTOL experiment Commercial use Edit Min Tuse Max Tuse Description Expected life time5 C 50 C desktop products 5 years0 C 70 C mobile products 4 yearsAutomotive use Edit Example Automotive Use Conditions 1 Min Tuse Max Tuse Description Expected life time 40 C 105 150 C under hood condition 10 to 15 years 40 C 80 C passenger compartment condition 10 to 15 years0 C 70 C passenger compartment condition 10 to 15 yearsTelecommunication use Edit Example European Telecom use Conditions definition Min Tuse Max Tuse Description Expected life time5 C 40 C class 3 1 Temperature controlled locations usually 25 years 5 C 45 C class 3 2 Partly temperature controlled locations usually 25 years 25 C 55 C class 3 3 Not temperature controlled locations usually 25 years 40 C 70 C class 3 4 Sites with heat trap usually 25 years 40 C 40 C class 3 5 Sheltered locations Direct solar radiation usually 25 yearsExample US Telecom use conditions definition Min Tuse Max Tuse Description Expected life time 40 C 46 C Uncontrolled environment 25 years5 C 40 C Enclosed building 25 yearsMilitary use Edit Example military use conditions Min Tuse Max Tuse Description 55 C 125 C MIL products 55 C up to 225 C high temp applicationsExample Edit Number of Failures rNumber of Devicesfailures DTest Hours per Device HCelsius 273 T Calculation Temperature in Kelvin Test Temperature HTRB or other burn in temperature T test displaystyle T text test Use Temperature standardized at 55 C or 328 K T use displaystyle T text use Activation Energy eV E a displaystyle E text a X 2 a n displaystyle text X 2 alpha nu Chi Squared 2 is the probability estimation for number of failures at a and n Confidence Level for X 2 distribution reliability calculations use a 60 or 60 a alpha Degrees of Freedom for X 2 displaystyle X 2 distribution reliability calculations use n 2r 2 n nu Acceleration Factor from the Arrhenius equation A f displaystyle A text f Boltzmann s Constant ℏ displaystyle hbar 8 617 x 10e 5 eV KDevice Hours DH D x HEquivalent Device Hours EDH D x H x A f displaystyle A text f Failure Rate per hour l hours displaystyle lambda text hours Failures in Time Failure Rate per billion hours FIT l FIT displaystyle lambda text FIT Mean Time to Failure MTTFWhere the Acceleration Factor from the Arrhenius equation is A f e E a ℏ 1 T use 1 T test displaystyle displaystyle A text f e frac E text a hbar times frac 1 T text use frac 1 T text test Failure Rate per hour l hour X 2 a n 2 D H A f X 2 a n 2 E D H displaystyle lambda text hour frac X 2 alpha nu 2 times D times H times A text f frac X 2 alpha nu 2 times EDH Failures in Time Failure Rate per billion hours FIT l FIT l hours 10 9 displaystyle lambda text FIT lambda text hours times 10 9 Mean Time to Failure in hours M T T F hours 1 l hours displaystyle MTTF text hours frac 1 lambda text hours Mean Time to Failure in years M T T F years 1 l hours 24 365 displaystyle MTTF text years frac 1 lambda text hours times 24 times 365 In case you want to calculate the acceleration factor including the Humidity the so called Highly accelerated stress test HAST then the Acceleration Factor from the Arrhenius equation would be A f e b HR test HR use e E a ℏ 1 T use 1 T test displaystyle displaystyle A text f e beta times text HR text test text HR text use times e frac E text a hbar times frac 1 T text use frac 1 T text test where HR test displaystyle text HR text test is the stress test relative humidity in percentage Typically is 85 where HR use displaystyle text HR text use is the typical use relative humidity in percentage Typically this is measured at the chip surface ca 10 20 where b displaystyle beta is the failure mechanism scale factor Which is a value between 0 1 and 0 15 In case you want to calculate the acceleration factor including the Humidity HAST and voltage stress then the Acceleration Factor from the Arrhenius equation would be A f e z V test V use e b HR test HR use e E a ℏ 1 T use 1 T test displaystyle displaystyle A text f e zeta times text V text test text V text use times e beta times text HR text test text HR text use times e frac E text a hbar times frac 1 T text use frac 1 T text test where V test displaystyle text V text test is the stress voltage in volts Typically is the VCCx1 4 volts e g 1 8x1 4 2 52 volts where V use displaystyle text V text use is the typical usage voltage or VCC in volts Typically VCC is 1 8v Depending on the design where z displaystyle zeta is the failure mechanism scale factor Which is a value between 0 and 3 0 Typically 0 5 for Silican junction defect See also EditTransistor aging Arrhenius equation Stress migration Reliability semiconductor Failure modes of electronics Bathtub curveReferences Edit a b AEC Documents a b JEDEC Standard Mil standard Archived 24 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine siliconfareast Comparing the Effectiveness of Stress based Reliability Qualification Stress Conditions Reliability Hotwire eMagazine SEMATECH Handbook Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title High temperature operating life amp oldid 1127646875, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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