Failure Analysis Engineer
Texas Instruments
Dallas, United States of America
1 month ago
Role details
Contract type
Permanent contract Employment type
Full-time (> 32 hours) Working hours
Regular working hours Languages
English Experience level
SeniorJob location
Dallas, United States of America
Tech stack
Computer Programming
Computer Engineering
Software Debugging
Digital Electronics
IEEE-488
Python
Vba Programming Language
Requirements
- Master's or PhD degree in Electrical Engineering, Electrical & Computer Engineering, Computer Engineering, Physics or related Engineering field
- 5 year's of experience in Analog IC Design or Failure Analysis
- Solid understanding of analog and digital circuits their operation and analysis. Solid understanding of process technologies., * Extensive hands on experience working with different lab equipment for taking data and / or performing device debug or failure analysis. For example use of the curve tracers; return loss analyzers, oscilloscopes and spectrum analyzers.
- Experience of bench testing of op-amps, ADCs, mixed -signal circuits and digital circuits
- Experience with bench validation and characterization PCBs
- Experience with integrated circuit and device failure analysis
- Programming skills for automation of bench characterization equipment (VBA, Python, GPIB)
- Knowledge and experience characterization of MOS and Bipolar components.
- Ability to work in a team setup comprising design and fab personnel.
- Strong time management skills that enable on-time project delivery.
- Demonstrated ability to build strong, influential relationships
- Ability to work effectively in a fast-paced and rapidly changing environment
- Ability to take the initiative and drive for results.
- Strong problem solving, verbal and written communications skills.
- Ability to multiplex between projects and be able to maintain project schedules.
Benefits & conditions
- Using global isolation tools such as OBIRCH and EMMI.
- Understand the failure analysis flow - how to get to root cause most efficiently.
- Electrical characterization of semiconductor devices - MOS and bipolar
- Effectively communicating your results via a final report. You need to be able to defend your recommendations to designers, process experts, and management.
- Be able to probe internal nets on an integrated circuit.
- Understand and apply various pieces of equipment used in testing and characterizing semiconductors.
You'll be involved with many aspects of new technology development at TI and have a chance to make a big impact by finding root cause of failures and recommending corrective actions. The skill set you develop will be broad: interacting with design, test, and semiconductor process experts regularly and learning how to "follow the data" and get from A -> B most efficiently to rapidly find root cause.
Why TI?
- Engineer your future. We empower our employees to truly own their career and development. Come collaborate with some of the smartest people in the world to shape the future of electronics.
- We're different by design. Diverse backgrounds and perspectives are what push innovation forward and what make TI stronger. We value each and every voice, and look forward to hearing yours. Meet the people of TI (https://edbz.fa.us2.oraclecloud.com/hcmUI/CandidateExperience/en/sites/CX/pages/4012)
- Benefits that benefit you. We offer competitive pay and benefits designed to help you and your family live your best life. Your well-being is important to us.
About the company
Texas Instruments Incorporated (Nasdaq: TXN) is a global semiconductor company that designs, manufactures and sells analog and embedded processing chips for markets such as industrial, automotive, data center, personal electronics and communications equipment. At our core, we have a passion to create a better world by making electronics more affordable through semiconductors. This passion is alive today as each generation of innovation builds upon the last to make our technology more reliable, more affordable and lower power, making it possible for semiconductors to go into electronics everywhere. Learn more at TI.com .