| Literature DB >> 24046487 |
Andreas Danilewsky1, Jochen Wittge, Konstantin Kiefl, David Allen, Patrick McNally, Jorge Garagorri, M Reyes Elizalde, Tilo Baumbach, Brian K Tanner.
Abstract
The behaviour of microcracks in silicon during thermal annealing has been studied using in situ X-ray diffraction imaging. Initial cracks are produced with an indenter at the edge of a conventional Si wafer, which was heated under temperature gradients to produce thermal stress. At temperatures where Si is still in the brittle regime, the strain may accumulate if a microcrack is pinned. If a critical value is exceeded either a new or a longer crack will be formed, which results with high probability in wafer breakage. The strain reduces most efficiently by forming (hhl) or (hkl) crack planes of high energy instead of the expected low-energy cleavage planes like {111}. Dangerous cracks, which become active during heat treatment and may shatter the whole wafer, can be identified from diffraction images simply by measuring the geometrical dimensions of the strain-related contrast around the crack tip. Once the plastic regime at higher temperature is reached, strain is reduced by generating dislocation loops and slip bands and no wafer breakage occurs. There is only a small temperature window within which crack propagation is possible during rapid annealing.Entities:
Keywords: X-ray diffraction imaging; in situ observations; microcracks; silicon wafer fracture
Year: 2013 PMID: 24046487 PMCID: PMC3769070 DOI: 10.1107/S0021889813003695
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Appl Crystallogr ISSN: 0021-8898 Impact factor: 3.304
Figure 1(a) Full timeline of the first heating of wafer 0110. The temperature was measured every second. (b) Beginning of heating with higher time resolution. The crack opens at a temperature of 598 K, i.e. for a temperature difference ΔT of 155 K between the two thermocouples. The side crack was generated between 893 and 895 K, with ΔT = 204 K at about 155–160 s.
Figure 2Transmission topographs of two cracks introduced from a 50 N indentation at the wafer edge, 90° from the notch: Tc indicates the shadow of a thermocouple, P1 the position where crack C3 originates (room temperature, view from the back side through the sample). (a) Before the first heating sequence. The left crack C1 is short and shows a substantial strain field at the tip of the crack for which κ = 20. The more dangerous crack C2 is almost four times longer and has a sharp contrast at the tip; no strain field is visible which results in κ = 167. (b) After the first heat treatment. The new horizontal crack C3 is generated. Around the crack tips dense dislocations and slip bands were produced, visible from the black contrasts.
Figure 3False-coloured X-ray diffraction images around the tip of crack C2 (detail from Fig. 2 ▶ a). (a) Image 0037 at room temperature before heating of the crack C2. P1 marks the position where the opening of the crack is impeded. (b) Image 0045 at ∼598 K (ΔT ≃ 155 K). The image shows the opening crack which produces a huge strain field below P1 and a small one S1 directly above. (c) Image 0049 at 689 K shows increasing strain fields, the upper one into the [00] direction. A small-sized strained area S2 builds up near the tip. (d) Image 0060 at 788 K shows increasing strain at S1 above P1. (e) Image 0104 at 893 K. The strain fields below and above P1 have both increased in size and intensity. The thermal stress exceeds 24.8 MPa. (f) Image 0105 at 895 K. The crack C3 has developed to the left into the [011] direction in less than 0.72 s and the strain fields have significantly decreased in size and intensity.
Figure 4(a) X-ray diffraction transmission-mode image of the crack after the second heating cycle viewed from the back side through the sample, taken at room temperature. Around the tip of the initial crack and the lateral crack tip, many dislocations and slip bands have been generated. (b) Interference contrast microscopy image from the back side with cracks C1, C2 and C3 visible. Surface steps around the tips of cracks C2 and C3 are traces of the slip bands in Fig. 4 ▶(a). (c) Interference contrast microscopy image of the front side of the same sample (mirrored). Cracks C2 and C3 are visible and the surfaces steps correspond to the slip bands in Fig. 4 ▶(a). The arrow on top indicates the position of indentation.
Figure 5Polarized infrared images showing the strain around the tip of crack C3 after the second heating (black arrow indicates crack position). The asymmetric lobes indicate the inclined 60° dislocations to be the origin of the strain. (a) Polars parallel and perpendicular to crack direction. (b) Polars at 45° to crack direction.