CMP - United Business Media TechOnline
All Articles Products Courses Papers VirtuaLabs Webinars Web



 
LoginRegister
      TechOnline > Electronics Company Directory > Technical Paper
Technical Papers
Lifetime Study For A Poly Fuse In A 0.35µm Polycide CMOS Process

Click to Download
pdf logo
White Paper
1,170 KB (4 pages)
April 2005
 

Johannes Fellner et al
austriamicrosystems

Poly Fuses are used as the base element for One Time Programmable Cells in a standard CMOS process. The element is built in principle by a small Poly Silicon line, which is optimized by layout for the usage within a standard CMOS process specification. No special process modules like high voltage devices are needed to implement such an element. Using a defined programming current, the resistor of the Poly Fuse will increase irreversibly over several orders of magnitude. By building an adequate electronic circuit the different level of resistances are detected. The digital information can be stored into a digital cell. Since the resistance of the programmed Poly Fuse is not stable over lifetime, the drift of the resistance is subject to investigation in this paper. An electronic circuit, detecting resistance levels of a Poly Fuse, has to handle this resistance drift.

The goal of this study is to show that a Poly Fuse has a sufficient life time stability to be used as a storage element even in high reliability circuits. This paper will show the drift of the resistance of a Poly Fuse over the whole range of programming currents for a standard polycide 0.35µm CMOS process. The Poly Fuse for the selected process is build by two different layers, which gives some special performance in terms of programming current.

 
Rate this paper
WORSE | BETTER
1 2 3 4 5

submit a paper

austriamicrosystems
   

TECH PAPER
1. Use Rowley CrossWorks and the MAXQ3120 Evaluation Kit to Create a Light Meter Application

TECH PAPER
2. System ACE Configuration Solution for Xilinx FPGAs

TECH PAPER
3. Interface Products Design Guide

TECH PAPER
4. Maintaining Data/Clock Synchronization with Spread-Spectrum EMI Reduction