ESD CORNER

ESD Systems’ ESD Technical Newsletter
Issue 10, October 1999: Volume 2
Reference:
http://www.esdsystems.com/newsletters/v2issue10.htm

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Sender : ESD Systems, 19 Brigham Street, # 9, Marlboro, MA 01752-3170
Phone  : 508-485-7390
E-mail : editor@esdsystems.com

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This is a free monthly newsletter, which specializes on issues in static control in the semiconductor/electronics workplace.

Need your own copy? Want to subscribe to this Newsletter? All you, or your colleague(s), need to do is simply fill out the subscription form at http://www.esdsystems.com/forms/esdmail.asp Let us know what you think. Tell us what you would like to see in future issues. Want to contribute articles or other related information to our Newsletter? Send your comments to the editor@esdsystems.com

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IN THIS ISSUE:
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·        HOT TIP of the MONTH (Charged Up)

·        Northeast Chapter ESD Association General Meeting (January 12, 2000)

·        ESD Q&A CORNER (ESD Control and Cost Benefits)

·        PRODUCT UPDATES (Coil Cords, Wescorp, New Catalog)

·        Dr. ZAP (ESD Control and Return on Investment)



HOT TIP of the MONTH (Charged Up)
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The most effective way to remove a charge without inducing an ESD Event is to “bleed” the charge to ground slow enough to control the current caused by the imbalance with a resistive material such as a dissipative grounded bench mat.  Isolated conductors can store a charge which can become the source of an ESD Event if they come into contact with a conductive material.  To avoid this, bring charged devices into contact with dissipative (greater than 1x10^4 ohms and recommend over 1x10^6 ohms but less than 1x10^10 ohms) and grounded materials.  This will allow the charged device to become neutralized or at least go the same potential as the contacted material and avoid an ESD Event or rapid discharge which has a large energy spike that can damage semiconductor materials.  For more information, refer to the white paper on discharge times: http://www.esdsystems.com/whtpaper/discharg.htm



General Meeting, Northeast Chapter of the ESD Association
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ESD Q&A CORNER
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The following questions and answers were selected from our FAQ WEB Page: http://www.esdsystems.com/question.html concerning Questions about ESD Control and Cost Benefits.

Q1:  Do you have any industry averages of how much (time and money) ESD damaged components cost the industry per year? - Anonymous, Dallas, TX  


A1:  One estimate published in our 07/96 Catalog states that the estimated costs of ESD damage to electronic based equipment run as high as $5 billion annually. 


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Q2:   It is sometime mentioned that ESD are cumulative in effect, i.e., some minor discharge may not break down the device/owyde /junction..but create leakages. Then, several of these "minor" discharges are able to create catastrophic defect. What is the point ? Does it exist some papers on this subject? - Anonymous, Toulouse, France  

A
2:  The point is that ESD can degrade or shorten the life span of any electronic product, which can in turn increase the warranty and repair costs and decrease customer satisfaction with your products. This is a big quality issue and can save companies 100s of 1,000s of dollars a year in defects, returns, scrap, repairs, etc.

Ted Dangelmayer of Lucent Technologies has a new book out that shows a graph of the relative cost benefit to compliance to an ESD program on the front cover. For example, Lucent Technologies’ manufacturing suffered losses estimated to be in excess of $325 million per year before instituting ESD controls.

There are a plethora of technical papers on this subject within the collection of EOS/ESD Symposium Proceedings which can be obtained directly from the ESD Association in Rome, New York at:

ESD Association
7900 Turin Road
Building 3, Suite 2
Rome, NY 13440-2069

Phone: (315) 339-6937
Fax: (315) 339-6793
http://www.borg.com/~eosesd/
 

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PRODUCT UPDATES (NEW!)
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ESD Premium Wrist Strap Coil Cords – Item #s 23500 - 23612

Our Premium Cords are Packed with Features

 


ESD Systems now carries the complete line of Wescorp ESD Control Products!!

 

ESD Systems now has a new catalog hitting the streets this November, reserve your copy now by filling out the form located at the below URL.

http://www.esdsystems.com/forms/esdmail.asp



 

Dr. ZAP
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Topic: 
ESD CONTROL & (HUGE) COST SAVINGS
topic gleaned from paper: http://www.esdsystems.com/whtpaper/esd_control_roi.htm

 

I        Introduction to ESD Control Programs

 

ESD Control programs are an essential part of a quality process and are always needed when handling ESD sensitive electronic/semiconductor devices.  The extent of the ESD Control program is determined by the ESD Sensitive (ESDS) devices themselves and how they are handled.  Refer to article “How to Set Up an ESD Control Program” [1] for additional information.

 

One of the main reasons that companies deploy ESD Control programs is to save money.  Increased throughput and decreased scrap can yield a Return On Investment (ROI ) of up to 1,000% per [2].  A secondary reason is to comply with their customers’ and ISO 9000 type programs’ requirements.  Whatever reason, setting up and implementing an ESD Control program will almost always produce favorable financial results.

 

II       Cost Reduction via ESD Control Programs

 

Having ESD awareness and following through with an ESD Control program is essential in reducing quality failures due to ESD.  ESD can affect product reliability with catastrophic damage which is readily apparent to latent degradation.  Latent degradation is particularly expensive requiring costly inspection and rework cycles in-house or  product failure in the field.  Maintaining good ESD controls will improve product throughput or yield, increasing reliability in the field which improves customer satisfaction leading to increased future business.

 

One test equipment manufacturer noted that GMR heads were being damaged during or after testing. These heads are extremely sensitive to ESD, and require additional handling precautions.

 

It is very important when designing and implementing an ESD Control program to know the ESD susceptibility of the ESD Sensitive (ESDS) devices you are trying to protect.    Classification of these devices should include all simulation models human body model (HBM), Machine Mode (MM), and Charged-device Model (CDM) that will properly characterize the devices' sensitivity when handled at various locations within the facility [6].  This will allow for the most economical program design.

 

Gene Chase, an ESD Consultant with ETS Inc., is quoted as saying “Millions of dollars are lost every year due to ESD [4]. Many of these incidents occur within the computer and communications industry.”   Examples of losses from ESD may be any of the following:

 

 

To properly determine the return on investment (ROI) from your ESD Control program, you must collect return, repair and scrap cost data before and after implementation.

 

Terry O’Malley, former AT&T ESD Manager, had collected data from several AT&T facilities both before and after instituting an ESD Control program.  The data speaks for itself; see figure 1 for a graph of two facilities that were monitored.  There was over a 50% savings in return and repair costs found at both facilities after initiating their ESD Control programs.

Protecting an ESDS device at all but one of the workstations is not acceptable.  For the ESD Control program to be effective, it must be comprehensive and followed with discipline throughout the manufacturing, transport, and storage cycle.  Management commitment is an important element of any effective ESD Control Program. ESD damage is not simple or inexpensive to identify.   To improve quality and profits, management should be involved.  Over 21% of failure analysis is due to electronics and industry studies showing that 30% of all electronic failures can be attributed to ESD.

Major companies including AT&T, Motorola, Hewlett Packard and IBM have been able to successfully track ESD damage cost and the resulting benefits of their ESD Control Programs. These companies have determined that ESD Control is an essential part of their success, one that results in significant investment pay-back.

Even with an ESD Control program in place, a typical electronics company may lose 5% of revenue from all causes of product failure.  Cost avoidance is the biggest issue when it comes to implementing an ESD Control program.  Another source [5] states that a typical pay-back on an ESD control program is 95:1.  For every one-dollar invested in ESD control, ninety-five dollars comes back as money saved [5].

 

V         Increased Sensitivity to ESD Control and some causes

 

Difference in component sensitivity between through-hole and surface mount devices is dependent on the architecture and technology packaged.  Typically, surface mount devices have much smaller architecture making them more susceptible to ESD than through-hole packaged devices.  The width of the circuitry conductors is as small as 0.10 micrometer (equal to 0.0001millimeter or 0.000004 inch).  To pack more and more circuitry into small packages, the spacing isolating circuitry has been reduced and can be as little as 300 mm.   A human being cannot feel ESD voltage until it reaches approximately 3,000 volts.  A discharge of static electricity is literally a little lighting bolt, producing heat that can easily burn through microelectronic architecture some rated with a withstand voltage as low as volts.

For IC packaging, the Input/Output (I/O) count has climbed from 600 to 1,000 to well over this now.  This implies that the spacing between the I/Os have decreased dramatically and where wire bonding is used, the air gap becomes that much smaller making the neighboring I/Os even more susceptible to ESD.  This can be seen as Ball Grid Array (BGA) chips have been replacing through-hole pin chip technology

The increasing sophistication of electronic devices has continued to make electronic devices more and more susceptible to ESD related damage. This is a trend that is expected to continue.

Dry areas further add to the susceptibility of ESD Sensitive (ESDS) devices.  Table II shows normal activity within a production facility where triboelectric charging levels of operators and objects are given in voltages and shown to be dependent on relative humidity (RH).  There can be over a 5 time increase in charge generation when the RH drops to 10%. 

There are a slew of other factors that can add to the problems that need to be countered by a well designed ESD Control program, such as: employee knowledge with training; ESD Control products designed to protect the corresponding ESDS devices; program funding with management buy-in;  employee compliance with internal discipline and audits, etc.

 

Conclusion:

 

A properly designed and successfully deployed ESD Control program is a proven money saver with an ROI of up to 1,000% per year.  Another source reports that for every one-dollar invested in ESD control, ninety-five dollars comes back as money saved.  Have you hugged your ESD Coordinator recently?


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This is a free monthly newsletter, which specializes on issues in static control in the semiconductor/electronics workplace.

Need your own copy? Want to subscribe to this Newsletter? All you or your colleague(s) need to do is simply fill out the subscription form at http://www.esdsystems.com/forms/esdmail.asp

This Newsletter is never sent unsolicited. To unsubscribe from this mailing, send an e-mail to ESD_Newsletters@esdsystems.com and put " UNSUBSCRIBE ESD_Newsletters" in the subject.

Let us know what you think. Tell us what you would like to see in future issues. Want to contribute articles or other related information to our Newsletter? Send your comments to the editor@esdsystems.com

Copyright © Desco Industries, Inc. 1999

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