ESD Damage
Type of ESD damage
Depending on the severity of the ESD damage, an ESD sensitive item can either be upset, wounded or experience a total failure.
- Upset failures
An upset failure or intermittent failure is usually involving a temporary malfunction of equipment with loss of information and functions. A reset is required to resume the operation of the equipment. No apparent hardware damage occurs during this failure.
- Latent failures
An ESDS item experiences a latent failure or is said to be wounded when the ESD damages is marginal. This defect is very difficult to detect and most of the time the ESDS item still pass the final testing.
- Total failures
A total failure or catastrophic failure occurs when an ESDS item is damaged to a point where it is no longer functioning. This failure is easily screened out through a tester.
Sources/Models of ESD damage
There are three common sources/models of ESD Damage. There are:
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Human Body Model ESD
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Machine Model ESD
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Charge Device Model ESD
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Human Body Model ESD
Human Body Model ESD causes the most ESD failures. It occurs when a human transfers the static charges from his body into the ESDS item. (E.g. during handling) We need to ground ourselves either through a wrist strap or an ESD shoe to prevent Human Body Model ESD damage.
- Machine Model ESD
When static charges that are present on an ungrounded conductive or dissipative part of a machine are transferred into an ESDS item, Machine Model ESD event is said to occur.
We need to ground all the conductive and dissipative part of a machine to prevent the ESDS item from being damaged by the Machine Model ESD.
- Charge Device Model ESD
Charge Device Model can be divided into two common types:
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 Charged Package Model
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 Field Induced Model
This Model basically represents ESD event that takes place when electrostatic charges are transferred from a charged ESDS item into another object with a lower electric potential.
- Charged Package Model
An ESDS item tribocharges when it slides down a plastic tube. The static charges discharge from its body into a conductive container and an ESD zapping takes place. This event is called a Charged Package Model ESD.
- Field Induced Model
When an ESDS item, for example an IC, is in an external electric field from a negatively charged object, it will be induced with positive charges facing the charged object while negative charges on the other side of the IC. When a grounded person touches the IC, an ESD event will occur. Another ESD event takes place when a grounded person removes it away from the negatively charged object. This is an example of a Field Induced Model ESD.
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