8

As in the title. What limits most integrated circuits to 150°C junction temperature?

I know it's not good practice to run chips very hot (as it shows you are wasting a lot of energy) but I'm curious as to what actually limits them to around 150°C.

Thomas O
  • 31,786
  • 58
  • 184
  • 322
  • You are not necessarily wasting a lot of energy to get to a high junction temperature. If you leave your mobile on a car dashboard on a sunny day then its temperature can get to 60+ degrees Celsius. Engine bay electronics can also need to work at high temperatures, in sealed enclosures with poor heat transfer properties. – uɐɪ Oct 18 '10 at 07:33
  • I suppose, but I'm working with low temp stuff (i.e. consumer - living room kind of stuff) so I made a judgement. – Thomas O Oct 18 '10 at 07:40

1 Answers1

5

The materials that the transistor is made out of primarily defines this. Germanium junctions will actually be much lower, more like 70C. Silicon and Gallium-Arsenide can handle 150-200C.

Someone with more semiconductor manufacturing experience can probably give a better answer but I believe that most of these junction limits are imposed due to the transistor crossing a thermal runaway point. Both BJTs and FETs, although for different reasons, have the characteristic that as temperature increases so does power dissipation, which of course creates more heat. As such once you break a threshold, the junction temperature will will rise very fast to the thermal breakdown point of the materials that make up the junction. Which if this occurs for very long results in smoke, and lots of fun smells.

I would venture a guess that 150C in the junction is roughly where normal packaging materials / the junction materials themselves can no longer pull enough heat out of the junction to keep it out of runaway and that the semiconductor materials themselves start to incur physical damage shortly after this temperature.

I don't exactly know what this process is, but it may simply be the point at which the crystalline structure begins to break down. A silicon transistor is normally made with a silicon crystal thats doped with boron (p type) or phosphorus(n type). You may get a more exact answer if you look into the chemistry of those structures.

Mark
  • 11,677
  • 1
  • 32
  • 38