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Photoemission Microscopy
Photoemission microscopy, or light emission microscopy (LEM), is a relatively new failure analysis technique for detecting photonic radiation from a defect site, primarily due to carrier recombination mechanisms. Such defect sites emit light during device operation which would otherwise be absent in a normal device. Such photoemissions, being very low-level, are not visible to the naked eye.
Photoemission microscopy uses a powerful image intensification
technology to
amplify
the
light
emitted by photo-emitting defect sites. The resulting radiation image is then
overlaid
with its corresponding die
surface image, such that the emission spot coincides with the precise
location of the defect. A CCD camera and a computer are used to accomplish this feat.
Other FA techniques are then performed to look for the physical anomaly
responsible for the abnormal light emission.
Fig. 1. Example of a Light Emission Microscope
Photoemission microscopy applications include but are not limited to the following : 1) detection of previously unknown or undetectable electroluminescence; 2) detection of avalanche luminescence from junction breakdowns, junction defects, currents due to saturated MOS transistors, and transistor hot electron effects; 3) detection of dielectric electroluminescence from current flow through SiO2 and SiN.
Fig. 2. Examples of light emission images
See Also: Failure Analysis; All FA Techniques; Curve Tracing; Microthermography Microprobing; FA Lab Equipment; Basic FA Flows; Package Failures; Die Failures
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