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Human Body Model (HBM) vs. IEC IEC61000-4-2

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发表于 2009-4-28 22:30:26 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式

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  California Micro Devices
White Paper
January 2008
Human Body Model (HBM) vs. IEC IEC61000-4-2
2
Overview
Many ESD standards such as the Human Body Model (HBM), Machine Model (MM), Charged Device Model (CDM),
and IEC 61000-4-2 have been developed to test for robustness and ensure ESD protection. Unfortunately, these
standards are often misunderstood and sometimes used interchangeably, which can result in tested, “protected”
systems that later fail in the consumer’s hands. To ensure better product reliability, it is critical that today’s design
engineer understand the significant differences between manufacturing environment and system end user environment
ESD testing.
While most designers are familiar with the classic device level manufacturing tests that are applied to integrated circuits,
the most common misunderstanding occurs between the HBM and IEC61000-4-2 standards. These two very different
standards are designed for very different purposes. Only the more stringent IEC 61000-4-2 standard allows one to
identify and correct ESD vulnerability of electronic products under real-world ESD stress conditions.
The purpose of this paper is to describe the intended purpose and basic differences of the HBM and IEC61000-4-2
standards and testing methodologies.
The Changing ESD Landscape: Increasing ESD Events, Decreasing On-Chip Protection
Three important changes have contributed to the increased ESD vulnerability of today’s electronic devices:
• Smaller Manufacturing Geometries - as manufacturing geometries for today's most advanced ICs decrease
to 90 nm and less, the voltage and current levels that can cause ESD related failures for these devices also
decrease. ESD damage can occur due to excessive voltage, high current levels, or a combination of both. High
voltages can cause gate oxide punch-through, while excessive I2R levels can cause junction failures and
metallization traces to melt. As manufacturing geometries decrease, the voltage and current levels that can
cause these failures also decrease. This has made it difficult to provide even relatively low levels of on-chip
ESD protection.
• A Reduction in On-Chip Protection - increased susceptibility to ESD damage has been widely publicized as
the Industry Council on ESD Target Specifications recently announced a move to reduce the standard level of
on-chip ESD protection, making external ESD protection circuits even more critical for adequate system
reliability. The focus of the Industry Council’s efforts is to reduce the level of on-chip ESD protection, primarily
aimed at providing adequate levels of ESD protection for manufacturing environments. They are not suggesting
reducing system level ESD protection, which they suggest must remain at existing levels.
• The Changing Application Environment – the proliferation of laptops, cell phones, MP3 players, digital
cameras, and other hand-held mobile devices, used in uncontrolled environments (i.e., no wrist-grounding
straps or conductive and grounded table surfaces). In these environments, people touch I/O connector pins
while connecting and disconnecting cables. Devices are subjected to constant ESD stress as users plug
cameras, games, and other devices into their USB and video ports. A portable device can also build up a
charge during normal usage and discharge that energy when connected to another device, such as a computer
or a TV. The simple act of walking across a synthetic carpet and touching an exposed port on the outside of a
digital TV can result in an ESD discharge greater than 35 kV. ESD discharges can occur directly at the port, or
they can be discharged through a cable. This scenario is particularly dangerous to electronics equipment
because the entire charge bypasses the connector’s ground shield (if it has one) and is discharged directly into
the system’s electrical circuits.
3
Table 1: Static Voltage Generation Examples (Source: ESD Association)
Examples of Static Voltage Generation At Different Levels of Relative Humidity (RH)
Means of Generation 10-25% RH 65-90% RH
Walking across carpet 35,000V 1,500V
Walking across vinyl tile 12,000V 250V
Worker at bench 6,000V 100V
Poly bag picked up from bench 20,000V 1,200V
Chair with urethane foam 18,000V 1,500V
ESD Standards in the Manufacturing Environment
ICs are inherently susceptible to ESD damage. This damage can occur during the process of assembling the ICs into
boards and finished systems, packaging, or in the field. There are several current methods for rating ICs for ESD in the
manufacturing environment. The most common include:
• HBM - this standard is intended to simulate a person becoming charged and discharging from a bare finger to
ground through the circuit under test.
• MM - intended to simulate a charged manufacturing machine, discharging through the device to ground.
• CDM - simulates an integrated circuit becoming charged and discharging to a grounded metal surface.
The purpose of traditional ESD testing of integrated circuits in the manufacturing environment is very different than
system level testing. HBM, MM and CDM tests are intended to ensure that integrated circuits survive the manufacturing
process. Generally, manufacturers design in only enough protection for their device to survive being assembled into a
finished system.
Processes such as packaging, final testing, shipment to a board assembly facility, placement on the circuit board, and
the soldering process are performed in controlled ESD environments that limits the level of ESD stress to which the
device is exposed. In the manufacturing environment, ICs are only specified to survive 2KV HBM, although some have
been specified as high as 8KV while others - particularly newer parts in very small geometry processes - can be 500V
or less.
While HBM is usually sufficient for the controlled ESD environment of the factory floor, it is completely inadequate for
system level testing. The levels of ESD strikes, both the voltages and the currents, can be much greater in the end
user environment. For this reason, the industry uses a different testing standard for system level ESD testing. This
standard is known as the IEC61000-4-2.
IEC61000-4-2: The ESD Standard for System Level Testing
The IEC standard is a system level test that replicates a charged person discharging to a system in a system end user
environment. The purpose of the system level test is to ensure that finished products can survive normal operation and
it is generally assumed that the user of the product will not take any ESD precautions to lower ESD stress to the
product.
The IEC 61000-4-2 standard defines four standard levels of ESD protection, using two different testing methodologies.
Contact discharge involves discharging an ESD pulse directly from the ESD test gun that is touching the device under
test. This is the preferred method of testing. However, the standard provides for an alternate test methodology known
as air discharge for cases where contact discharge testing is not possible. In the air discharge test, the ESD test gun is
brought close to the device under test until a discharge occurs. The standards are defined so that each level is
considered equivalent – a Level 4 contact discharge of 8KV is considered equivalent to a 15KV air discharge.
4
Table 2. IEC61000-4-2 Test Levels
Contact Discharge Air Discharge
Level Test Voltage kV Level Test Voltage kV
1 2 1 2
2 4 2 4
3 6 3 8
4 8 4 15
X Note 1 Special X Note 1 Special
Notes
1. “x” is an open level. The level has to be specified in the dedicated equipment specification. If higher voltages than
those are specified, special test equipment may be required.
HBM versus IEC61000-4-2
There are several differences between the HBM and IEC61000-4-2 standard that are immediately obvious. The most
important differences are as follows:
• the amount of current and I2R power released during a voltage strike
• the rise time of the voltage strike
• the number of voltage strikes repeated in the tests
The Amount of Current and I2R Power Released During a Voltage Strike
A key difference between these two standards is the peak current level associated with a strike. As shown in Table 3,
the peak current discharged during an 8KV HBM strike is less than the peak current discharged during a 2KV IEC
61000-4-2 strike and, at 8KV (a common system level ESD requirement), the peak current for an IEC 61000-4-2 strike
is over 22 times higher than what most high performance semiconductors are designed to withstand.
Table 3. Peak current of HBM vs. IEC 61000-4-2 ESD Standards
Applied Voltage (kV) Peak Current (A)
Human Body Model
Peak Current (A)
IEC 61000-4-2
2 1.33 7.5
4 2.67 15.0
6 4.00 22.5
8 5.33 30.0
10 6.67 37.5
5
The difference in current is critical to whether the ASIC will survive the ESD strike. Because high current levels can
cause junction failures and metallization traces to melt, it is possible that a chip protected to 8KV HBM can be
destroyed by a 2KV IEC61000-4-2 strike. For this reason, it is crucial that system design engineers do not rely on HBM
ratings to determine whether a system will survive an ESD strike after it is shipped to end customers.
RiseTime of the Voltage Strike
Another key difference between these standards is the rise time of the voltage strike. The HBM model specifies a rise
time of 25nS. An IEC pulse has a rise time of less than 1 nS and dissipates most of its energy in the first 30nS. If it
takes 25nS to respond, the device rated using the HBM specification can be destroyed before its protection circuits are
even activated (see Figure 1).
Figure 1. IEC 61000-4-2 ESD Pulse Waveform
This example demonstrates that a protection circuit designed to withstand an HBM pulse may not even turn on before
the “protected” chip is destroyed in an IEC 61000-4-2 pulse.
The Number of Voltage Strikes Repeated
Another difference between the HBM and IEC standards is the number of strikes used during testing. The HBM
standard requires only a single positive and single negative strike to be tested, whereas the IEC61000-4-2 test requires
3 positive strikes and 3 negative strikes. It is possible for a device to survive the first strike, but fail on subsequent
strikes due to damage sustained during the initial strike. In today’s application environment, systems can be subject to
many strikes over their lifetimes, and it is becoming more common for system vendors to test their systems with even
more strikes than the minimum of three that are specified in the IEC61000-4-2 standard.
Beware of Misleading Marketing Specifications
Some semiconductor vendors are now increasing their "integrated ESD" ratings and potentially confusing system
designers. Some of these vendors have even dropped saying which standard was used to test their devices, in an
effort to mislead customers, implying that their integrated ESD protection eliminates the need for external ESD devices.
It is critical for a system designer to check which standard was used to rate the ESD level of a device. If a device has
been tested to the IEC61000-4-2 standard, it will say so. Devices that do not state the testing standard used, have
usually been tested using the HBM or other non-IEC61000-4-2 standards, and should not be considered to have
adequate ESD protection integrated. For example, CMD recently tested an HDMI switch from a vendor prominently
marketing that they integrated 8KV of ESD protection. When tested, this device failed and was destroyed by a 6 KV
IEC61000-4-2 standard discharge test.
6
If the system designer is not aware of this potentially misleading marketing tactic, it can cause costly program slips and
redesigns.
Summary
System designers need to be familiar with the differences between various ESD test standards. The ratings that are
used for protecting ICs in the manufacturing environment such as HBM and CDM are not equivalent to system level
ESD tests such as the IEC61000-4-2. Each standard has a legitimate purpose, but misapplying these standards can
result in design delays and/or product returns. For system level ESD ratings, always use the IEC61000-4-2 standard.
发表于 2009-4-29 10:12:33 | 显示全部楼层
这个问题 我记得 老早之前就讨论过了。

HBM模型跟-4-2的模型是不一样的,参数完全不同。

希望朋友们仔细看一下这份文档。
发表于 2009-12-25 18:37:58 | 显示全部楼层
不知道是否有IEC IEC61000-4-2
的規範可找

樓主是否可以分享?
发表于 2010-9-29 16:52:34 | 显示全部楼层
最近開始接觸ESD的工作~~趕緊來吸收一些資料~~謝謝大大的分享~~
发表于 2010-12-1 15:39:54 | 显示全部楼层
[s:23]  [s:23] 谢谢很有帮助

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