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Using MRED to Screen Multiple-Node Charge-Collection Mitigated SOI Layouts

IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science

Black, Jeffrey B.; Dame, Jeff A.; Black, Dolores A.; Dodd, Paul E.; Shaneyfelt, Marty R.; Teifel, John T.; Salas, Joseph G.; Steinbach, Robert; Davis, Matthew; Reed, Robert A.; Weller, Robert A.; Trippe, James M.; Warren, Kevin M.; Tonigan, Andrew M.; Schrimpf, Ronald D.; Marquez, Richard S.

Silicon-on-insulator latch designs and layouts that are robust to multiple-node charge collection are introduced. A general Monte Carlo radiative energy deposition (MRED) approach is used to identify potential single-event susceptibilities associated with different layouts prior to fabrication. MRED is also applied to bound single-event testing responses of standard and dual interlocked cell latch designs. Heavy ion single-event testing results validate new latch designs and demonstrate bounds for standard latch layouts.

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Understanding the Implications of a LINAC's Microstructure on Devices and Photocurrent Models

IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science

McLain, Michael L.; McDonald, Joseph K.; Hembree, Charles E.; Sheridan, Timothy J.; Weingartner, Thomas A.; Dodd, Paul E.; Shaneyfelt, Marty R.; Hartman, Elmer F.; Black, Dolores A.

The effect of a linear accelerator's (LINAC's) microstructure (i.e., train of narrow pulses) on devices and the associated transient photocurrent models are investigated. The data indicate that the photocurrent response of Si-based RF bipolar junction transistors and RF p-i-n diodes is considerably higher when taking into account the microstructure effects. Similarly, the response of diamond, SiO2, and GaAs photoconductive detectors (standard radiation diagnostics) is higher when taking into account the microstructure. This has obvious hardness assurance implications when assessing the transient response of devices because the measured photocurrent and dose rate levels could be underestimated if microstructure effects are not captured. Indeed, the rate the energy is deposited in a material during the microstructure peaks is much higher than the filtered rate which is traditionally measured. In addition, photocurrent models developed with filtered LINAC data may be inherently inaccurate if a device is able to respond to the microstructure.

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Upsets in Erased Floating Gate Cells with High-Energy Protons

IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science

Gerardin, S.; Bagatin, M.; Paccagnella, A.; Visconti, A.; Bonanomi, M.; Calabrese, M.; Chiavarone, L.; Ferlet-Cavrois, V.; Schwank, J.R.; Shaneyfelt, Marty R.; Dodds, N.; Trinczek, M.; Blackmore, E.

We discuss upsets in erased floating gate cells, due to large threshold voltage shifts, using statistical distributions collected on a large number of memory cells. The spread in the neutral threshold voltage appears to be too low to quantitatively explain the experimental observations in terms of simple charge loss, at least in SLC devices. The possibility that memories exposed to high energy protons and heavy ions exhibit negative charge transfer between programmed and erased cells is investigated, although the analysis does not provide conclusive support to this hypothesis.

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Analysis of TID Process, Geometry, and Bias Condition Dependence in 14-nm FinFETs and Implications for RF and SRAM Performance

IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science

King, M.P.; Wu, X.; Eller, M.; Samavedam, S.; Shaneyfelt, Marty R.; Silva, A.I.; Draper, Bruce L.; Rice, W.C.; Meisenheimer, Timothy L.; Felix, J.A.; Zhang, E.X.; Haeffner, T.D.; Ball, D.R.; Shetler, K.J.; Alles, M.L.; Kauppila, J.S.; Massengill, Lloyd W.

Total ionizing dose results are provided, showing the effects of different threshold adjust implant processes and irradiation bias conditions of 14-nm FinFETs. Minimal radiation-induced threshold voltage shift across a variety of transistor types is observed. Off-state leakage current of nMOSFET transistors exhibits a strong gate bias dependence, indicating electrostatic gate control of the sub-fin region and the corresponding parasitic conduction path are the largest concern for radiation hardness in FinFET technology. The high-Vth transistors exhibit the best irradiation performance across all bias conditions, showing a reasonably small change in off-state leakage current and Vth, while the low-Vth transistors exhibit a larger change in off-state leakage current. The "worst-case" bias condition during irradiation for both pull-down and pass-gate nMOSFETs in static random access memory is determined to be the on-state (Vgs = Vdd). We find the nMOSFET pull-down and pass-gate transistors of the SRAM bit-cell show less radiation-induced degradation due to transistor geometry and channel doping differences than the low-Vth transistor. Near-threshold operation is presented as a methodology for reducing radiation-induced increases in off-state device leakage current. In a 14-nm FinFET technology, the modeling indicates devices with high channel stop doping show the most robust response to TID allowing stable operation of ring oscillators and the SRAM bit-cell with minimal shift in critical operating characteristics.

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Outstanding Conference Paper Award: 2015 IEEE Nuclear and Space Radiation Effects Conference

IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science

Dodds, Nathaniel A.; Martinez, Marino M.; Dodd, Paul E.; Shaneyfelt, Marty R.; Sexton, Frederick W.; Black, Jeffrey B.; Lee, David S.; Swanson, Scot E.; Bhuva, B.L.; Warren, K.W.; Reed, R.A.; Trippe, J.M.; Sierawski, B.D.; Weller, R.A.; Mahatme, N.M.; Gaspard, N.G.; Assis, T.A.; Austin, R.A.; Weeden-Wright, S.L.; Massengill, L.M.; Swift, G.S.; Wirthlin, M.W.; Cannon, M.C.; Liu, R.L.; Chen, L.C.; Kelly, A.K.; Marshall, P.W.; Trinczek, M.C.; Blackmore, E.W.; Wen, S.-J.W.; Wong, R.W.; Narasimham, B.N.; Pellish, J.A.; Puchner, H.P.

This conference presents the recipients of the Outstanding Conference Paper Award from the 2015 IEEE Nuclear and Space Radiation Effects Conference.

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The Contribution of Low-Energy Protons to the Total On-Orbit SEU Rate

IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science

Dodds, N.A.; Martinez, Marino M.; Dodd, Paul E.; Shaneyfelt, Marty R.; Sexton, Frederick W.; Black, J.D.; Lee, David S.; Swanson, Scot E.; Bhuva, B.L.; Warren, K.M.; Reed, R.A.; Trippe, J.; Sierawski, B.D.; Weller, R.A.; Mahatme, N.; Gaspard, N.J.; Assis, T.; Austin, R.; Weeden-Wright, S.L.; Massengill, L.W.; Swift, G.; Wirthlin, M.; Cannon, M.; Liu, R.; Chen, L.; Kelly, A.T.; Marshall, P.W.; Trinczek, M.; Blackmore, E.W.; Wen, S.J.; Wong, R.; Narasimham, B.; Pellish, J.A.; Puchner, H.

Low-and high-energy proton experimental data and error rate predictions are presented for many bulk Si and SOI circuits from the 20-90 nm technology nodes to quantify how much low-energy protons (LEPs) can contribute to the total on-orbit single-event upset (SEU) rate. Every effort was made to predict LEP error rates that are conservatively high; even secondary protons generated in the spacecraft shielding have been included in the analysis. Across all the environments and circuits investigated, and when operating within 10% of the nominal operating voltage, LEPs were found to increase the total SEU rate to up to 4.3 times as high as it would have been in the absence of LEPs. Therefore, the best approach to account for LEP effects may be to calculate the total error rate from high-energy protons and heavy ions, and then multiply it by a safety margin of 5. If that error rate can be tolerated then our findings suggest that it is justified to waive LEP tests in certain situations. Trends were observed in the LEP angular responses of the circuits tested. Grazing angles were the worst case for the SOI circuits, whereas the worst-case angle was at or near normal incidence for the bulk circuits.

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New Insights Gained on Mechanisms of Low-Energy Proton-Induced SEUs by Minimizing Energy Straggle

IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science

Dodds, N.A.; Dodd, Paul E.; Shaneyfelt, Marty R.; Sexton, Frederick W.; Martinez, Marino M.; Black, J.D.; Marshall, P.W.; Reed, R.A.; McCurdy, M.W.; Weller, R.A.; Pellish, J.A.; Rodbell, K.P.; Gordon, M.S.

We present low-energy proton single-event upset (SEU) data on a 65 nm SOI SRAM whose substrate has been completely removed. Since the protons only had to penetrate a very thin buried oxide layer, these measurements were affected by far less energy loss, energy straggle, flux attrition, and angular scattering than previous datasets. The minimization of these common sources of experimental interference allows more direct interpretation of the data and deeper insight into SEU mechanisms. The results show a strong angular dependence, demonstrate that energy straggle, flux attrition, and angular scattering affect the measured SEU cross sections, and prove that proton direct ionization is the dominant mechanism for low-energy proton-induced SEUs in these circuits.

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New insights gained on mechanisms of low-energy proton-induced SEUs by minimizing energy straggle

IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science

Dodds, Nathaniel A.; Dodd, Paul E.; Shaneyfelt, Marty R.; Sexton, Frederick W.; Martinez, Marino M.; Black, Jeffrey B.; Marshall, P.W.; Reed, R.A.; McCurdy, M.M.; Weller, R.A.; Pellish, J.A.; Rodbell, K.P.; Gordon, M.G.

In this study, we present low-energy proton single-event upset (SEU) data on a 65 nm SOI SRAM whose substrate has been completely removed. Since the protons only had to penetrate a very thin buried oxide layer, these measurements were affected by far less energy loss, energy straggle, flux attrition, and angular scattering than previous datasets. The minimization of these common sources of experimental interference allows more direct interpretation of the data and deeper insight into SEU mechanisms. The results show a strong angular dependence, demonstrate that energy straggle, flux attrition, and angular scattering affect the measured SEU cross sections, and prove that proton direct ionization is the dominant mechanism for low-energy proton-induced SEUs in these circuits.

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The contribution of low-energy protons to the total on-orbit SEU rate

IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science

Dodds, Nathaniel A.; Martinez, Marino M.; Dodd, Paul E.; Shaneyfelt, Marty R.; Sexton, Frederick W.; Black, Jeffrey B.; Lee, David S.; Swanson, Scot E.; Bhuva, B.L.; Warren, K.W.; Reed, R.A.; Trippe, J.M.; Sierawski, B.D.; Weller, R.A.; Mahatme, N.M.; Gaspard, N.G.; Assis, T.A.; Austin, R.A.; Massengill, L.M.; Swift, G.S.; Wirthlin, M.W.; Cannon, M.C.; Liu, R.L.; Chen, L.C.; Kelly, A.K.; Marshall, P.W.; Trinczek, M.C.; Blackmore, E.W.; Wen, S.-J.W.; Wong, R.W.; Narasimham, B.N.; Pellish, J.A.; Puchner, H.P.

Low- and high-energy proton experimental data and error rate predictions are presented for many bulk Si and SOI circuits from the 20-90 nm technology nodes to quantify how much low-energy protons (LEPs) can contribute to the total on-orbit single-event upset (SEU) rate. Every effort was made to predict LEP error rates that are conservatively high; even secondary protons generated in the spacecraft shielding have been included in the analysis. Across all the environments and circuits investigated, and when operating within 10% of the nominal operating voltage, LEPs were found to increase the total SEU rate to up to 4.3 times as high as it would have been in the absence of LEPs. Therefore, the best approach to account for LEP effects may be to calculate the total error rate from high-energy protons and heavy ions, and then multiply it by a safety margin of 5. If that error rate can be tolerated then our findings suggest that it is justified to waive LEP tests in certain situations. Trends were observed in the LEP angular responses of the circuits tested. As a result, grazing angles were the worst case for the SOI circuits, whereas the worst-case angle was at or near normal incidence for the bulk circuits.

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The contribution of low-energy protons to the total on-orbit SEU rate

Dodds, Nathaniel A.; Martinez, Marino M.; Dodd, Paul E.; Shaneyfelt, Marty R.; Sexton, Frederick W.; Black, Jeffrey B.; Lee, David S.; Swanson, Scot E.; Bhuva, B.L.; Warren, K.W.; Reed, R.A.; Trippe, J.M.; Sierawski, B.D.; Weller, R.A.; Mahatme, N.M.; Gaspard, N.G.; Assis, T.A.; Austin, R.A.; Massengill, L.M.; Swift, G.S.; Wirthlin, M.W.; Cannon, M.C.; Liu, R.L.; Chen, L.C.; Kelly, A.K.; Marshall, P.W.; Trinczek, M.C.; Blackmore, E.W.; Wen, S.-J.W.; Wong, R.W.; Narasimham, B.N.; Pellish, J.A.; Puchner, H.P.

Abstract not provided.

Outstanding conference paper award 2014 IEEE nuclear and space radiation effects conference

IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science

Dodds, Nathaniel A.; Dodds, Nathaniel A.; Schwank, James R.; Schwank, James R.; Shaneyfelt, Marty R.; Shaneyfelt, Marty R.; Dodd, Paul E.; Dodd, Paul E.; Doyle, Barney L.; Doyle, Barney L.; Trinczek, M.C.; Trinczek, M.C.; Blackmore, E.W.; Blackmore, E.W.; Rodbell, K.P.; Rodbell, K.P.; Reed, R.A.; Reed, R.A.; Pellish, J.A.; Pellish, J.A.; LaBel, K.A.; LaBel, K.A.; Marshall, P.W.; Marshall, P.W.; Swanson, Scot E.; Swanson, Scot E.; Vizkelethy, Gyorgy V.; Vizkelethy, Gyorgy V.; Van Deusen, Stuart B.; Van Deusen, Stuart B.; Sexton, Frederick W.; Sexton, Frederick W.; Martinez, Marino M.; Martinez, Marino M.

The recipients of the 2014 NSREC Outstanding Conference Paper Award are Nathaniel A. Dodds, James R. Schwank, Marty R. Shaneyfelt, Paul E. Dodd, Barney L. Doyle, Michael Trinczek, Ewart W. Blackmore, Kenneth P. Rodbell, Michael S. Gordon, Robert A. Reed, Jonathan A. Pellish, Kenneth A. LaBel, Paul W. Marshall, Scot E. Swanson, Gyorgy Vizkelethy, Stuart Van Deusen, Frederick W. Sexton, and M. John Martinez, for their paper entitled "Hardness Assurance for Proton Direct Ionization-Induced SEEs Using a High-Energy Proton Beam." For older CMOS technologies, protons could only cause single-event effects (SEEs) through nuclear interactions. Numerous recent studies on 90 nm and newer CMOS technologies have shown that protons can also cause SEEs through direct ionization. Furthermore, this paper develops and demonstrates an accurate and practical method for predicting the error rate caused by proton direct ionization (PDI).

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Hardness assurance for proton direct ionization-induced SEEs using a high-energy proton beam

IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science

Dodds, N.A.; Schwank, James R.; Shaneyfelt, Marty R.; Dodd, Paul E.; Doyle, Barney L.; Trinczek, M.; Blackmore, E.W.; Rodbell, K.P.; Gordon, M.S.; Reed, R.A.; Pellish, J.A.; LaBel, K.A.; Marshall, P.W.; Swanson, Scot E.; Vizkelethy, Gyorgy V.; Van Deusen, Stuart B.; Sexton, Frederick W.; Martinez, Marino M.

The low-energy proton energy spectra of all shielded space environments have the same shape. This shape is easily reproduced in the laboratory by degrading a high-energy proton beam, producing a high-fidelity test environment. We use this test environment to dramatically simplify rate prediction for proton direct ionization effects, allowing the work to be done at high-energy proton facilities, on encapsulated parts, without knowledge of the IC design, and with little or no computer simulations required. Proton direct ionization (PDI) is predicted to significantly contribute to the total error rate under the conditions investigated. Scaling effects are discussed using data from 65-nm, 45-nm, and 32-nm SOI SRAMs. These data also show that grazing-angle protons will dominate the PDI-induced error rate due to their higher effective LET, so PDI hardness assurance methods must account for angular effects to be conservative. We show that this angular dependence can be exploited to quickly assess whether an IC is susceptible to PDI.

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Mapping of radiation-induced resistance changes and multiple conduction channels in TaOx memristors

IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science

Hughart, David R.; Pacheco, Jose L.; Lohn, Andrew L.; Mickel, Patrick R.; Bielejec, Edward S.; Vizkelethy, Gyorgy V.; Doyle, Barney L.; Wolfley, Steven L.; Dodd, Paul E.; Shaneyfelt, Marty R.; McLain, Michael L.; Marinella, Matthew J.

The locations of conductive regions in TaOx memristors are spatially mapped using a microbeam and Nanoimplanter by rastering an ion beam across each device while monitoring its resistance. Microbeam irradiation with 800 keV Si ions revealed multiple sensitive regions along the edges of the bottom electrode. The rest of the active device area was found to be insensitive to the ion beam. Nanoimplanter irradiation with 200 keV Si ions demonstrated the ability to more accurately map the size of a sensitive area with a beam spot size of 40 nm by 40 nm. Isolated single spot sensitive regions and a larger sensitive region that extends approximately 300 nm were observed.

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SEGR in SiO${}_2$ –Si$_3$ N$_4$ Stacks

IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science

Schwank, James R.; Shaneyfelt, Marty R.

This work presents experimental SEGR data for MOS-devices, where the gate dielectrics are are made of stacked SiO2–Si3N4 structures. Also a semi-empirical model for predicting the critical gate voltage in these structures under heavy-ion exposure is proposed. Then statistical interrelationship between SEGR cross-section data and simulated energy deposition probabilities in thin dielectric layers is discussed.

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Results 1–25 of 127
Results 1–25 of 127