Abstract

Fracture and breakage of single crystals, particularly of silicon wafers, are multi-scale problems: the crack tip starts propagating on an atomic scale with the breaking of chemical bonds, forms crack fronts through the crystal on the micrometre scale and ends macroscopically in catastrophic wafer shattering. Total wafer breakage is a severe problem for the semiconductor industry, not only during handling but also during temperature treatments, leading to million-dollar costs per annum in a device production line. Knowledge of the relevant dynamics governing perfect cleavage along the {111} or {110} faces, and of the deflection into higher indexed {hkl} faces of higher energy, is scarce due to the high velocity of the process. Imaging techniques are commonly limited to depicting only the state of a wafer before the crack and in the final state. This paper presents, for the first time, in situ high-speed crack propagation under thermal stress, imaged simultaneously in direct transmission and diffraction X-ray imaging. It shows how the propagating crack tip and the related strain field can be tracked in the phase-contrast and diffracted images, respectively. Movies with a time resolution of microseconds per frame reveal that the strain and crack tip do not propagate continuously or at a constant speed. Jumps in the crack tip position indicate pinning of the crack tip for about 1-2 ms followed by jumps faster than 2-6 m s(-1), leading to a macroscopically observed average velocity of 0.028-0.055 m s(-1). The presented results also give a proof of concept that the described X-ray technique is compatible with studying ultra-fast cracks up to the speed of sound.

Highlights

  • Wafer breakage during high-temperature processing is a severe problem in semiconductor device manufacturing

  • During thermal processing in semiconductor manufacturing, catastrophic total wafer breakage may result from such microcracks and it is an increasingly expensive hazard for production, with costs of millions of dollars per production line per annum (International SEMATECH Manufacturing Initiative, 2004)

  • Because of a frame rate of one image every 0.72 s, only a minimum crack tip velocity of 7 Â 10À3 m sÀ1 could be determined for a critical crack which appeared between two frames, propagating in the {110} plane in the h110i direction (Danilewsky et al, 2013)

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Summary

Introduction

Wafer breakage during high-temperature processing is a severe problem in semiconductor device manufacturing. Because of a frame rate of one image every 0.72 s, only a minimum crack tip velocity of 7 Â 10À3 m sÀ1 could be determined for a critical crack which appeared between two frames, propagating in the {110} plane in the h110i direction (Danilewsky et al, 2013).

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