电子能量损失谱(EELS)
WE KNOW HOW™
Electron Beam Induced Current (EBIC) is an SEM-based analytical technique for semiconductor device characterization. Like cathodoluminescence (CL), EBIC relies on high-energy electron beams to generate electron-hole pairs (EHPs) as analytical signals. A picoammeter connected between the p-n junction measures induced currents during plan-view (PV) or cross-section (XS) scanning, where EBIC signal intensity reflects built-in electric field strength at pn-junctions, with defect recombination sites showing reduced signals.
EBIC and secondary electron (SE) signals are typically acquired simultaneously, providing complementary spatial mapping of electrical/structural properties. This highly effective technique enables large-area (mm²) analysis at 50-100 nm resolution for failure analysis (FA) in PV/XS-SEM and STEM configurations.
Furthermore, EBIC quantitatively determines vertical pn-junction positions in complex heterostructures like LEDs, VCSELs, and edge-emitting lasers, and can estimate minority carrier diffusion lengths from XS-EBIC data.
EBIC Ideal Applications
- Semiconductor failure analysis - defect localization for in-depth FA
- Device characterization - junction positioning and minority carrier diffusion length measurement
Our Strengths
- Exceptional for locating hidden localized faults in large-area devices
- Precise pn-junction position determination in XS mode
Limitations
- Requires pre-existing pn-junctions in samples
- Maximum acceptable leakage current ~10μA (beyond which EBIC data becomes too noisy for reliable analysis)
EBIC Technical Specifications
- Detected signal: Electron Beam Induced Current (EBIC)
- Imaging/mapping capability: Yes
- Lateral resolution: 20-500 nm (varies with SEM conditions and sample composition/topology)