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BJT ESD failure, anyone has experience with that?

 
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cmosbjt



Joined: 25 Apr 2004
Posts: 227
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Location: Boston


Post10 Feb 2008 22:09   BJT ESD failure, anyone has experience with that?

Hi, I have trouble using a bipolar transistor without ESD protection. As shown in the picture. When the open face package is built, the transistor works fine.

The collector current: Ic = 5mA,
The base current: Ib = 50 uA,
The base voltage: Vb = 0.85V

As you know by changing the emitter downbond, we can adjust the RF gain. So we change the emitter bond wire once in a while. But that cause most the trouble. After changing the emitter bond wire, the BJT draws a lot of base current in order to maintain the Ic and Vb:

The collector current: Ic = 5mA,
The base current: Ib = 300 uA,
The base voltage: Vb = 0.85V

So I believe the device is damaged.

My questions are:

1. Does anyone has similar experience as this one?
2. Do you know what is the mechanism of the damage? Any reference articals?
3. Is there any failure analysis procedure I can do to confirm/verify the damage?
4. How do you handle this unprotected device if changing the bondwire is neccesary?

Thanks

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extraord



Joined: 05 Mar 2004
Posts: 68
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Post11 Feb 2008 22:58   Re: BJT ESD failure, anyone has experience with that?

from your decription the transistor doesn't look dead.
I think this may caused by some parasitic devices which leakage the other 250uA.
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Troy



Joined: 09 Jan 2004
Posts: 24
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Location: RI, USA


Post12 Feb 2008 14:11   BJT ESD failure, anyone has experience with that?

If your bond pads are on top of the device junctions it sounds like you are damaging the E/B juction by changing the bond wire. The stress of pulling the bond wire off or the stress of rebonding a new wire or both could be damaging them.
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cmosbjt



Joined: 25 Apr 2004
Posts: 227
Helped: 8
Location: Boston


Post13 Feb 2008 4:08   Re: BJT ESD failure, anyone has experience with that?

Troy wrote:
If your bond pads are on top of the device junctions it sounds like you are damaging the E/B juction by changing the bond wire. The stress of pulling the bond wire off or the stress of rebonding a new wire or both could be damaging them.

No, the bond pad is far away from the device. And BTW, the bond wire is changed by our very professional assembly group. They have 30 years experience.

Added after 2 minutes:

extraord wrote:
from your decription the transistor doesn't look dead.
I think this may caused by some parasitic devices which leakage the other 250uA.
Such as ???.
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Jim cage



Joined: 02 Jul 2006
Posts: 149
Helped: 6


Post04 Mar 2008 22:15   Re: BJT ESD failure, anyone has experience with that?

Was this transistor tested on MM,CDM and HBM and thus it corresponds to this behavior?
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krashkealoha



Joined: 03 Jul 2004
Posts: 101
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Location: 21.402, -157.739


Post16 Mar 2008 5:06   Re: BJT ESD failure, anyone has experience with that?

Is it possible to post the Gummel curve for the device before and after (damage)? From the Gummel curve, you can tell if your e-b junction has high leakage or if your CB or CE junctions are damaged.

Any chance of the emitter potential being pulled higher than the base during the bonding process or post-bonding process?
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electronrancher



Joined: 24 Mar 2002
Posts: 474
Helped: 34


Post21 Mar 2008 0:38   BJT ESD failure, anyone has experience with that?

It's been my experience that you cannot change a bondwire. Removing/rebonding often damages the silicon under the bondpad, which is usually doped N to act as a simple ESD device. Damaging this junction makes it leaky.

The failure analysis you should do is to curve-trace the BE juntion. If it was ESD zap, then the BE has been damaged as if it were a zener diode.

But I think you may need to cut the metal trace from emitter to bondpad on a damaged device and make sure the leakage is not directly through the bondpad.

And are you positively sure that with the new bondwire inductace, your device is not simply oscillating? Even emitter follower can oscillate if there is feedback through the EB capacitance.
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luojiexiaojun



Joined: 14 Mar 2008
Posts: 21


Post22 Mar 2008 3:35   BJT ESD failure, anyone has experience with that?

关注中。。。。
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electronrancher



Joined: 24 Mar 2002
Posts: 474
Helped: 34


Post22 Mar 2008 5:28   BJT ESD failure, anyone has experience with that?

ni hui shou yingwen ma?

because this board is in yingwen. so use it.
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leo_o2



Joined: 03 Sep 2004
Posts: 337
Helped: 21


Post19 Apr 2008 6:27   BJT ESD failure, anyone has experience with that?

Possibly it is damaged by ESD stress on BE junction.
What's the size for your device?
If it is big enough, maybe you can try to short B and C during E bonding changing. It will hehave as ESD protection for itself.
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elantra



Joined: 17 Dec 2002
Posts: 50
Helped: 1


Post25 Apr 2008 3:46   BJT ESD failure, anyone has experience with that?

Is it possible from the temperature variation?
for example, the different package or bonding changes the thermal conditions and ...
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