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Prepared by: ATUL DAVE Student Id : 500530985 Prepared on: 25/03/2013 Prepared for: PROF. GUERKOV
INTRODUCTION
Human knowledge is doubling every 10 years. In the past decade, more scientific knowledge has been created than in all human history. This has resulted in a growing artificial world, where we are becoming more and more dependent on electronics, computers and computing systems.
Contents 1 Introduction........................................................... 1-2 2 Mems and Applications.......................................... 3-4 2.1 Open Problems in MEMS Testing ...................... 5-7 2.2 Failure modes and Analysis................................ 8 2.3 Mems Devices.................................................. 9 2.4 Resonator Application..................................... 10 2.5 Test Generation for MEMS................................ 12 2.6 Fault Modeling and Simulation of MEMS........ 14 3 CARAMEL 15 3.1 Comb Accelerometer....................................... 16 3.2 Micro fluidic Bio Chip.................................... 17 3.3 Continuous Flow Bio Chip................................ 18-19 4 Concluding Remarks ............................ 20 5. References........ 21
ABSTRACT Micro electro mechanical Systems (MEMS) has existed as a technical field since the early 1980s. Past research has primarily focused on developing new process technologies to support specific applications. As stable process technologies have emerged, many research efforts have shifted
towards the design of systems containing hundreds or even thousands of mixed-domain components. As a result, there is a growing need for CAD tools that shorten the design and development time for MEMS-based products. Success in this area depends greatly on new design methods that allow complex micro systems of mechanical, electrical, thermal, fluidic, and optical components to be designed and integrated. MEMS layout synthesis allows rapid design optimization and layout generation from engineering performance specifications. In addition, CAD tools capable of assessing and preventing faulty MEMS behaviour are also necessary to ensure the end quality of complex MEMS-based products. Here, we describe the integration of our MEMS synthesis and test tools to meet the functional and test objective through synthesis. Both current and expected applications of MEMS tend to be in sensing and actuation applications where the device will lay a mission critical role. Examples here are pressure sensors for aircraft engine control, vehicle braking, vessel pressure in reactors and medical implants. These devices will also tend to have mechatronic interfaces or at the least, non-electrical inputs and limited access for test. Production test, self test and on-line data validation will all become critical specifications for these devices. To achieve fault simulation and testability analysis in these devices, it is necessary to model both the mechatronic and electrical elements within the same simulation environment to ensure the efficient injection and analysis of faults. In most cases, the fault simulation process must be carried out in closed loop configuration to allow non ideologies that can affect fault coverage such as process variations, noise, mode coupling and resolution limitations to be handled correctly. FMEA+ was first proposed by Olbrich [I]. The technique relies on integrating top down failure analysis and bottom-up fault simulation. The top-down technique, Failure mode and effect analysis (FMEA) [2], is well accepted by the system design industries whereas fault simulation tends to be restricted to low level components. To illustrate the need for the integration of the two methods, a brief analysis of the types of faults that can occur in MEMS devices reveals the following categories: - Local defects - Parameters out of tolerance - Wear (especially in devices with movable parts) - Environmental hazards - Problems due to imperfection in the design process (i.e. design validation poor compared to mixed-signal designs) - Mode coupling / structure oscillation in incorrect modes - System level faults (for example crosstalk between signals of different modules) Micro electromechanical systems (MEMS) are miniature electromechanical sensor and actuator systems developed from the mature batch-fabricated processes of VLSI technologies. Projected growth in the MEMS market requires significant advances in CAD and manufacturing for MEMS. These advances must be accompanied with testing methodologies that ensure both high quality and Reliability. Effectiveness of any testing methodology depends on the accuracy of the fault models Applied. So, the first step towards development of comprehensive testing methodology involves Generating accurate fault models for MEMS creating accurate fault models requires a complete knowledge of all the possible failure mechanisms in MEMS A systematic study of the
impact of these failure mechanism so on the final functionality of MEMS devices provides important guidelines for MEMS fault model generation. A CAD tool called CARAMEL contamination And Reliability Analysis of Micro electro mechanical Layout) has been developed that can be used for fault model generation for MEMS. CARAMEL is based on the IC contamination analysis tool CODEF and is capable of analyzing the impact of contamination particles on the geometrical and material properties of micro electromechanical systems. Output generated by CARAMEL indicates that a wide range of defective structures are possible due to the presence of particulate contaminations. Moreover, electromechanical simulations of CARAMEL in such representations of defective layout has revealed that a wide variety of faulty behaviors are associated with these defects. Several hundred contamination simulations were performed using CARAMEL on the surface Micro machined comb-drive resonator. The results obtained were classified under three broad fault classes: catastrophic, parametric, and harmless. The defect statistics generated by CARAMEL indicates the comb drive as the most defect-prone region of the micro resonator. Most of the comb drive defects resulted in the catastrophic failures. Contaminations introduced during Poly O deposition caused the maximum number of faults found in the micro resonator. Such defect-to-fault mappings provide an essential tool for the MEMS fault model generation process. Simulation results presented in this report confirm that CARAMEL can be used as an effective tool for development of realistic fault models for MEMS. MEMS devices are miniature electromechanical sensors and actuators fabricated using VLSI processing techniques. Typical sizes for MEMS devices range from nanometers to millimeters (100 nm to 1000 m). MEMS enhances realization of system-on-chip (SOC) by integration of mixed domain technologies such as electrical, optical, mechanical, thermal, and fluidics. Typical examples for commercial MEMS devices include Analog Devices ADXL series accelerometers, Free Scale Semiconductors pressure sensors and accelerometers, Texas Instruments digital light processing (DLP) displays, and Knowles Electronics SiSonic MEMS microphone. Micro fluidics-based biochips, also referred to as lab-on-a-chip, are replacing cumbersome and expensive laboratory equipment for applications such as high-throughput sequencing, parallel immunoassays, protein crystallization, blood chemistry for clinical diagnostics, and environmental toxicity monitoring.
To ensure the testability and reliability of these MEMS-based SOCs, MEMS devices need to be thoroughly tested, particularly when used for safety-critical applications such as in the automotive and healthcare industry. Therefore, there is a pressing need for design for testability (DFT) and built-in self-test (BIST) of MEMS. MEMS devices necessitate special considerations during fabrication processes such as handling, dicing, testing, and packaging.
The micromechanical parts need to be protected from shock and vibration during transport and packaging. Extreme care must be taken to avoid particle contamination at various processing steps involved in MEMS fabrication. As a common practice in MEMS industry, the backside of a fully processed wafer is attached to an adhesive plastic film and then mounted in a rigid frame for dicing at the wafer-processing facility. MEMS devices often require packaging before dicing that is, 0-level packaging at the wafer level by either wafer-to-wafer bonding or local bonding of miniature caps (e.g., Si or glass) over the MEMS structure using a hermetic sealing ring.
MEMS test methods and instrumentation vary depending on whether The testing is performed at the wafer level (i.e., unpackaged die) or on packaged devices. Waferlevel testing is carried out using precision-controlled wafer probers that step from die to die on the wafer, making electrical contact using needle probes. Fully packaged MEMS devices can be tested with the electrical and non-electrical inputs required for the sensor to function. A variety of environmental test methods commonly used for testing packaged ICs can be directly employed for testing packaged MEMS devices. Many standard tests are common to both ICs and MEMS, such as thermal cycling, high temperature storage, thermal shock, and high humidity. However, many MEMS packages need to fulfill additional specifications.
Electrical Test
A typical experimental setup used for testing an electro statically actuated MEMS relay is shown below. The setup shown consists of an Agilent 33220A function generator, Krohnit 7600 Wideband Amplifier, HP 54501A Oscilloscope, MM8060 Micromanipulator Probe Station, and HP3468A 4-wire Multi meter.
The basic test setup described here can be used to test a variety of actuators including electrostatic, thermal, and piezoelectric
MEMS actuators typically include mechanical motion associated with the electrical signals. Optical profilometers, such as an optical microscope, confocal microscope, optical interferometers, and laser Doppler vibrometer, are useful for making static and dynamic measurements of MEMS devices. An optical microscope equipped with high-resolution objectives and accurate graticule can be used to measure MEMS features in a two dimensional plane view. Modern confocal microscopes employ low-cost lasers and computers to scan a thin slice through the specimen. The optical interferometers make use of white light (e.g., a sodium lamp) or of coherent monochromatic light (a laser light). Optical interferometers are useful for measuring noncontact three-dimensional Profiles of MEMS devices. Examples of optical interferometers include Wyko series manufactured by Veeco Instruments, NewView 6000 series manufactured by Zygo, PhotoMap 3-D profilometers by Fogale nanotech, and the Xi-100 developed by Ambios Technology
proof mass spring damping System dynamics modeled by: where x1(t) is the input; x2(t) is the output
RF MEMS Devices
MEMS employed in radio-frequency (RF) applications are called RF MEMS. These represent a new class of devices and components that exhibit low insertion loss, high isolation, high Q, small size and low power consumption; and enable new system capabilities. The application of MEMS in RF technology can be broadly classified into two categories: active (moving) devices, which involve mechanical motion (e.g., RF MEMS switch, RF MEMS capacitors, RF MEMS resonators, etc.) and static (non-moving) components (e.g., micro machined transmission lines, resonators, etc.). RF MEMS Switches MEMS relays are more preferable than other conventional semiconductor based switching devices such as field effect transistors, due to low-loss, low power consumption, absence of intermodulation distortion and broad-band operation from DC to the microwave frequency range. An ohmic contact switch uses a metal-to-metal contact between the two electrodes for signal transmission. Ohmic Contact Switches The operating voltage required to obtain electrical continuity can be obtained from measuring the R-V characteristics using the experimental setup discussed in Electrical Testing. RF characteristics of RF MEMS switches are obtained by measuring the S-parametersin both the ON and OFF states of the switch. S-parameters are most commonly used for electrical characterization of devices, components and networks operating at RF and microwave frequencies. Capacitive Contact Switches In a capacitive contact switch, a thin dielectric layer is present between the two electrodes. Capacitive contact RF MEMS switches can be characterized by measuring the capacitancevoltage (C-V) characteristics. A C-V meter or an impedance analyzer equipped with a bias-T
can be used in conjunction with a probe station to obtain C-V characteristics. The pull-down voltage can be determined from the C-V characteristics. RF characteristics of RF MEMS switches are obtained by measuring the S-parameters using a network analyzer Reliability of RF MEMS The reliability of MEMS switches has been a major concern that limits the use of MEMS in real world applications. Ohmic contact MEMS switch reliability issues, such as failure due to stiction and contact degradation, have been observed to be the key failure modes. In capacitive contact type MEMS switches, reliability issues such as stiction due to charge accumulation in the dielectric layer and capacitance degradation with actuation are commonly encountered failure modes. A low frequency electrical test setup for reliability testing of RF MEMS switches is shown in the figure below. The setup consists of two signal generators, a filter, and a demodulator. The RF MEMS switches are driven by an actuation signal from Generator 1. A low frequency RF signal from Generator 2 is superimposed on the actuation signal. The modulated signal is detected using a demodulator to obtain switch characteristics such as pull-in voltage, rise-time, fall-time, and capacitance change for capacitive switches or contact resistance change for ohmic switches. Reliability of switches can be quantified by measuring the drift in any of these parameters.
Resonators
A mechanical filter is composed of multiple coupled lumped mechanical resonators. Mechanical filters transform electrical signals into mechanical energy, perform a filtering function, and then transform the remaining output mechanical energy back into an electrical signal. MEMS technology has been applied to the miniaturization of mechanical resonators and filters. MEMS resonators and filters are characterized by measuring the frequency response characteristics. The performance parameters such as the resonant frequency, Q-factor and bandwidth are obtained from the measured frequency response characteristics. The equivalent circuit parameters can be extracted from the measured frequency response characteristics. Resonators Disk Resonator Example A MEMS disk resonator in a one-port configuration is shown in Figure (a). The contourmode disk resonator consists of a resonating circular disk, two input electrodes, and a bottom output bias electrode.
A typical test setup for testing a one-port contour-mode disk RF MEMS resonator is shown in Figure (a). The required test instrumentation includes a network analyzer, a DC voltage source, a bias-T and a vacuum chamber. The measured transmission spectrum obtained from a one-port measurement of a 156 MHz disk resonator is shown in Figure (b). From the measured results, the equivalent circuit model (shown in Figure (c)) parameters have been extracted to be Rx = 22.287 kW, Lx = 70.15 mH, Cx=14.793 aF, and Co = 57.78 fF.
Pressure sensors are one of the most successful MEMS devices with a wide-range of applications in automotive systems, industrial process control, environmental monitoring, medical diagnostics and monitoring. A MEMS pressure sensor consists of a mechanical membrane present at the interface between a sealed cavity and the external environment. The pressure difference between the sealed cavity and the surrounding environment produces a deflection of the diaphragm. Pressure sensors are characterized by measuring the output response for various applied pressures. The measurement setup for testing capacitive pressure sensors is shown in the Figure below.
The setup consists of two components: 1) a custom made pressure chamber which can withstand large pressures, and 2) the signal conditioning circuitry. The pressure chamber is made of Teflon with dimensions of 9.5_ 8.5_ 3_. A pressure gauge is used to monitor the pressure inside the chamber. The pressure sensor is placed inside the chamber. When the pressure inside the chamber exceeds the atmospheric pressure, the movable diaphragm starts deflecting downwards, thereby increasing the capacitance between the top and bottom electrodes. The signal conditioning board (MS3110BDPC from Micro sensors Inc.) outputs a voltage corresponding to a change in the sensor capacitance.
Electrostatic force induced by self-test voltage is used to mimic the effect of input acceleration. Calibration needed, not good for manufacturing test. MEMS BIST: using electrically induced pneumatic actuation Example: self-testing of a piezo resistive pressure sensor
Pulse voltage applied to resistor heater embedded in cavity The air inside the cavity is heated: air pressure increased Output response sensed by piezo resistive gauge in the membrane and compared with good device response
MEMS BIST: using electrically induced resistor heating to mimic thermal radiation input of infrared imager
Electrical voltage applied to heating resistor on suspended membrane of each pixel Membrane is heated up as by incident infrared radiation in normal operation MEMS BIST: Oscillation-based Test Methodology (OTM) Measuring indirect parameters was demonstrated for a MEMS magnetometer Direct parameters (e.g., sensitivity) are effective to verify the device function, but not always easy to measure. Electrically induced Lorentz force in magnetic field is used as test stimuli. The DUT is reconfigured into an oscillating device with a feedback circuit. Some indirect parameters (e.g., oscillation frequency and amplitude) which are easier to observe, are measured for testing the MEMS device. Defect leading to a structure asymmetry of the device.
Voltage pulses applied to a heating resistor on the cantilever. The cantilever deflects due to the induced heat. Deflection measured by piezo resistor Wheatstone Bridge in anchor. Pseudo-random maximum-length binary sequences are generated by Linear-feedback-shift-registers (LFSRs). The output bridge voltage is converted to digital values and analyzed for Input-output cross-correlation function (CCF). Test signature compared with expected values for Go/No-Go decision.
In CARAMEL, a defective MEMS structure is represented by a 3-D representation, which is then extracted to mesh netlist for mechanical simulation. Faults considered include: stiction for ADXL75, particulate contamination for microresonator, vertical stiction, foreign particles, etch variation for resonators and accelerometers. Effects of these faults to resonant frequency was also identified. Lancaster University Approach This technique integrates qualitative analysis and quantitative fault simulation to generate realistic faults for MEMS transducers. Industrial failure modes of sensor/actuator are analyzed and simulated by inductive fault analysis (IFA) and finite element simulation. Analog and mixed-signals are also simulated using inductive fault analysis (defect-related faults) and process variation analysis (parametric faults). Faults are then described by a behavioural model for test purpose. Major faults considered: local defects, global and local parameters out of tolerance, wear, environmental hazards, and problems from imperfection in design process. TIMA Approach Instead of using IFA, fabrication process of MEMS is analyzed to determine realistic defects or failure mechanisms. Failure mechanisms are divided into those occurred in CMOS process, and those occurred in micromachining process. Defects are classified into gauge (e.g., sending circuit) faults and microstructure faults. Each class is further divided into catastrophic faults and parametric faults. Gauge faults: shorts, opens, or changes in width, length and metal resistivity. Microstructure faults: break-around-gauge, stiction, non released microstructure, asymmetrical microstructure, or change of Youngs modulus. BIST Structure of Comb Accelerometer Simplified comb accelerometer structure for BIST functions M1-M8: movable fingers Ms: central mass D1-D8: fixed driving fingers S1-S8: fixed sensing fingers Test Stimulus Generation Test stimulus generation: use electrostatic force Fd to mimic the effect of inertial force. Voltage Vd applied to fixed driving fingers {D1, D3, D5, D7} Nominal voltage Vnom applied to Ms and {D2, D4, D6, D8} Induced electrostatic force Fd on movable mass Ms: Displacement of mass x=Fd /k Measure the resulted differential capacitance change and compare with expected good Device value Normal operation mode Modulation voltage Vmp=V0sqrt(t) applied to {S1, S3, S5, S7} Modulation voltage Vmn=-V0sqrt(t) applied to {S2, S4, S6, S8} Input acceleration a results in displacement of movable mass x=-Msa/k The voltage in the movable massV Ms=(x/d0)V0 sqr(t) Measuring the voltage level VMs in the movable mass, we know the value of displacement x, hence the acceleration a.
Comb Accelerometer: Symmetry BIST [Deb 2002] Movable mass is divided into two (left and right) equal conductors connected by an insulator layer. Movable mass activated by electrostatic force as in sensitivity BIST Modulation voltage Vmp=V0sqrt(t) applied to {S1, S3, S5, S7} Modulation voltage Vmn=-V0sqrt(t) applied to {S2, S4, S6, S8} The difference between voltage Vs1 from left movable fingers {M2, M3} and voltage Vs2 from right movable fingers {M6, M7} is sensed by a differential amplifier.
Any local defect changing device left-right symmetry results in difference between Vs1 and Vs2 and will be detected. Comb Accelerometer: Symmetry BIST [Xiong 2005a] For comb accelerometers in which the movable mass is not divided (e.g., ADXL accelerometers), symmetry BIST needs to be implemented in a different way [Xiong 2005a] Movable mass activated by electrostatic force as in sensitivity BIST Modulation voltage Vmp=V0sqrt (t) applied to {S1, S5} Modulation voltage Vmn=-V0sqrt (t) applied to {S3, S7} Due to device symmetry, capacitance C1 between {S1, S5} and {M2, M3} should always equal to capacitance C2 between {S3, S7} and {M6, M7}. Hence, for good device, VMs=0.
Any local defect changing device left right symmetry results in non-zero VMs and will be detected. It divides fixed instead of movable capacitance plates.
Motivation for
Microfluidic
Biochips:
Goal Carry out biochemical laboratory experiments on a microchip Advantages Higher throughput Minimal human intervention Smaller sample/reagent consumption Higher sensitivity Increased productivity
Applications of Biochips:
Clinical diagnostics, e.g., healthcare for premature infants, point-of-care diagnosis of diseases Bio-smoke alarm: environmental monitoring Massive parallel DNA analysis, automated drug discovery, protein crystallization Robust test techniques needed: Outcome of biochemical results must be reliable Testing must be low-cost: disposable devices ($1/chip)
(alleviate the need for external devices) Fault effect should be unambiguous
If there is a droplet, output=1; otherwise, output=0 Fault-free: there is a droplet between sink electrodes Faulty: there is no droplet.
Continuous-flow biochips:
Permanently etched micro channels, micro pumps and micro valves Digital micro fluidic biochips: Manipulation of liquids as discrete droplets
Advantages No bulky liquid pumps are required Electro wetting uses microwatts of power Can be easily battery powered Standard low-cost fabrication methods can be used Continuous-flow systems use expensive lithographic techniques to create channels Digital micro fluidic chips are possible using solely PCB processes
Concluding Remarks:
A majority of micro electro mechanical systems (MEMS) devices are inherently mechanical in nature and therefore require some special considerations during various manufacturing stages and testing. This chapter discussed some of the important handling considerations during dicing, packaging, and testing. A wide variety of test methods, such as electrical, optical, mechanical, and environmental, for characterization of various MEMS devices. This is reviewed with the instrumentation, typical setup, and important characteristics for testing a wide variety of MEMS devices, including accelerometers, gyroscopes, humidity sensors, RF MEMS, optical MEMS, pressure sensors, and microphones Micro fluidics-based biochips have a great potential for replacing cumbersome and expensive laboratory equipment. Test techniques for digital micro fluidic chips have been discussed. Most BIST techniques estimate the mechanical movement of the microstructure by performing Electrical measurements. In practice, such measurements are difficult, if not impossible to perform because of the presence of noise. Setting the range for fault-free behavior, as in analog testing, is a difficult task. Mistakes in setting such thresholds may result in information loss that degrades test quality. This problem can be tackled by analyzing various failure mechanisms and the resulting deviations in the final functionality. Knowledge of such correlations will lead to more effective BIST techniques (like modification of structural and material properties, selection of better measurement techniques) and aid in MEMS fault diagnosis. Therefore, our work in MEMS testing first centers on exploring a wide range of defects and the faulty MEMS behaviour associated with them. MEMS DFT/BIST techniques and examples have been discussed. It should be noted that the diversity of MEMS devices and their principles remain a challenge in developing universal DFT and BIST solutions
References:
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