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BS EN IEC 60749-26:2018

$198.66

Semiconductor devices. Mechanical and climatic test methods – Electrostatic discharge (ESD) sensitivity testing. Human body model (HBM)

Published By Publication Date Number of Pages
BSI 2018 54
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This part of IEC 60749 establishes the procedure for testing, evaluating, and classifying components and microcircuits according to their susceptibility (sensitivity) to damage or degradation by exposure to a defined human body model (HBM) electrostatic discharge (ESD).

The purpose of this document is to establish a test method that will replicate HBM failures and provide reliable, repeatable HBM ESD test results from tester to tester, regardless of component type. Repeatable data will allow accurate classifications and comparisons of HBM ESD sensitivity levels.

ESD testing of semiconductor devices is selected from this test method, the machine model (MM) test method (see IEC 60749-27) or other ESD test methods in the IEC 60749 series. Unless otherwise specified, this test method is the one selected.

PDF Catalog

PDF Pages PDF Title
2 undefined
5 English
CONTENTS
8 FOREWORD
10 1 Scope
2 Normative references
3 Terms and definitions
13 4 Apparatus and required equipment
4.1 Waveform verification equipment
14 4.2 Oscilloscope
4.3 Additional requirements for digital oscilloscopes
4.4 Current transducer (inductive current probe)
4.5 Evaluation loads
15 4.6 Human body model simulator
4.7 HBM test equipment parasitic properties
5 Stress test equipment qualification and routine verification
5.1 Overview of required HBM tester evaluations
Figures
Figure 1 – Simplified HBM simulator circuit with loads
16 5.2 Measurement procedures
5.2.1 Reference pin pair determination
5.2.2 Waveform capture with current probe
17 5.2.3 Determination of waveform parameters
18 Figure 2 – Current waveform through shorting wires
19 Figure 3 – Current waveform through a 500 Ω resistor
20 5.2.4 High voltage discharge path test
5.3 HBM tester qualification
5.3.1 HBM ESD tester qualification requirements
5.3.2 HBM tester qualification procedure
Figure 4 – Peak current short circuit ringing waveform
21 5.4 Test fixture board qualification for socketed testers
22 5.5 Routine waveform check requirements
5.5.1 Standard routine waveform check description
5.5.2 Waveform check frequency
Tables
Table 1 – Waveform specification
23 5.5.3 Alternate routine waveform capture procedure
5.6 High voltage discharge path check
5.6.1 Relay testers
5.6.2 Non-relay testers
5.7 Tester waveform records
5.7.1 Tester and test fixture board qualification records
5.7.2 Periodic waveform check records
24 5.8 Safety
5.8.1 Initial set-up
5.8.2 Training
5.8.3 Personnel safety
6 Classification procedure
6.1 Devices for classification
6.2 Parametric and functional testing
6.3 Device stressing
25 6.4 Pin categorization
6.4.1 General
6.4.2 No connect pins
26 6.4.3 Supply pins
6.4.4 Non-supply pins
27 6.5 Pin groupings
6.5.1 Supply pin groups
6.5.2 Shorted non-supply pin groups
6.6 Pin stress combinations
6.6.1 Pin stress combination categorization
28 Table 2 – Preferred pin combinations sets
29 6.6.2 Non-supply and supply to supply combinations (1, 2, … N)
Table 3 – Alternative pin combinations sets
30 6.6.3 Non-supply to non-supply combinations
31 6.7 HBM stressing with a low-parasitic simulator
6.7.1 Low-parasitic HBM simulator
6.7.2 Requirements for low parasitics
6.8 Testing after stressing
7 Failure criteria
8 Component classification
32 Table 4 – HBM ESD component classification levels
33 Annex A (informative)HBM test method flow chart
Figure A.1 – HBM test method flow chart (1 of 3)
36 Annex B (informative)HBM test equipment parasitic properties
B.1 Optional trailing pulse detection equipment / apparatus
Figure B.1 – Diagram of trailing pulse measurement setup
37 B.2 Optional pre-pulse voltage rise test equipment
Figure B.2 – Positive stress at 4 000 V
Figure B.3 – Negative stress at 4 000 V
38 Figure B.4 – Illustration of measuring voltage before HBM pulsewith a Zener diode or a device
Figure B.5 – Example of voltage rise before the HBM current pulseacross a 9,4 V Zener diode
39 B.3 Open-relay tester capacitance parasitics
B.4 Test to determine if an HBM simulator is a low-parasitic simulator
40 Figure B.6 – Diagram of a 10-pin shorting test device showing current probe
41 Annex C (informative)Example of testing a product using Table 2, Table 3,or Table 2 with a two-pin HBM tester
C.1 General
Figure C.1 – Example to demonstrate the idea of the partitioned test
42 C.2 Procedure A (following Table 2):
43 C.3 Alternative procedure B (following Table 3):
Table C.1 – Product testing in accordance with Table 2
44 C.4 Alternative procedure C (following Table 2):
Table C.2 – Product testing in accordance with Table 3
45 Table C.3 – Alternative product testing in accordance with Table 2
46 Annex D (informative)Examples of coupled non-supply pin pairs
47 Annex E (normative)Cloned non-supply (I/O) pin sampling test method
E.1 Purpose and overview
E.2 Pin sampling overview and statistical details
48 E.3 IC product selections
Figure E.1 – SPL, V1, VM, and z with the Bell shapedistribution pin failure curve
49 E.4 Randomly selecting and testing cloned I/O pins
E.5 Determining if sampling can be used with the supplied Excel spreadsheet
E.5.1 Using the supplied Excel spreadsheet
E.5.2 Without using the Excel spreadsheet
E.6 HBM testing with a sample of cloned I/O pins
50 E.7 Examples of testing with sampled cloned I/Os
52 Figure E.2 – I/O sampling test method flow chart
53 Bibliography
BS EN IEC 60749-26:2018
$198.66