The failure mechanism stimulated by accelerated stress in the degradation may be different from that under normal conditions, which would lead to invalid accelerated life tests. To solve the problem, we study the re- lation between the Arrhenius equation and the lognormal distribution in the degradation process. Two relationships of the lognormal distribution parameters must be satisfied in the conclusion of the unaltered failure mechanism, the first is that the logarithmic standard deviations must be equivalent at different temperature levels, and the second is that the ratio of the differences between logarithmic means must be equal to the ratio of the differences between reciprocals of temperature. The logarithm of distribution lines must simultaneously have the same slope and regular interval lines. We studied the degradation of thick-film resistors in MCM by accelerated stress at four temperature levels (390, 400, 410 and 420 K), and the result agreed well with our method.
The effect of drain-source voltage on A1GaAs/InGaAs PHEMTs thermal resistance is studied by experimental measuring and simulation. The result shows that A1GaAs/InGaAs PHEMTs thermal resistance presents a downward trend under the same power dissipation when the drain-source voltage (VDs) is decreased. Moreover, the relatively low VDS and large drain-source current (IDs) result in a lower thermal resistance. The chip-level and package-level thermal resistance have been extracted by the structure function method. The simulation result indicated that the high electric field occurs at the gate contact where the temperature rise occurs. A relatively low VDS leads to a relatively low electric field, which leads to the decline of the thermal resistance.
To obtain thermal contact resistance(TCR) between the vertical double-diffused metal-oxide-semiconductor(VDMOS) and the heat sink, we derived the relationship between the total thermal resistance and the contact force imposed on the VDMOS. The total thermal resistance from the chip to the heat sink is measured under different contact forces, and the TCR can be extracted nondestructively from the derived relationship. Finally, the experimental results are compared with the simulation results.
The thermal characteristics of 808 nm Al Ga As/Ga As laser diodes(LDs) are analyzed via electrical transient measurements and infrared thermography. The temperature rise and thermal resistance are measured at various input currents and powers. From the electrical transient measurements, it is found that there is a significant reduction in thermal resistance with increasing power because of the device power conversion efficiency. The component thermal resistance that was obtained from the structure function showed that the total thermal resistance is mainly composed of the thermal resistance of the sub-mount rather than that of the LD chip, and the thermal resistance of the sub-mount decreases with increasing current. The temperature rise values are also measured by infrared thermography and are calibrated based on a reference image, with results that are lower than those determined by electrical transient measurements. The difference in the results is caused by the limited spatial resolution of the measurements and by the signal being captured from the facet rather than from the junction of the laser diode.
The effects of self-heating and traps on the drain current transient responses of AlGaN/GaN HEMTs are studied by 2D numerical simulation. The variation of the drain current simulated by the drain turn-on pulses has been analyzed. Our results show that temperature is the main factor for the drain current lag. The time that the drain current takes to reach a steady state depends on the thermal time constant, which is 8μs in this case. The dynamics of the trapping of electron and channel electron density under drain turn-on pulse voltage are discussed in detail, which indicates that the accepter traps in the buffer are the major reason for the current collapse when the electric field significantly changes. The channel electron density has been shown to increase as the channel temperature rises.