fbpx
Wikipedia

Radiation hardening

Radiation hardening is the process of making electronic components and circuits resistant to damage or malfunction caused by high levels of ionizing radiation (particle radiation and high-energy electromagnetic radiation),[1] especially for environments in outer space (especially beyond the low Earth orbit), around nuclear reactors and particle accelerators, or during nuclear accidents or nuclear warfare.

Most semiconductor electronic components are susceptible to radiation damage, and radiation-hardened (rad-hard) components are based on their non-hardened equivalents, with some design and manufacturing variations that reduce the susceptibility to radiation damage. Due to the extensive development and testing required to produce a radiation-tolerant design of a microelectronic chip, the technology of radiation-hardened chips tends to lag behind the most recent developments.

Radiation-hardened products are typically tested to one or more resultant-effects tests, including total ionizing dose (TID), enhanced low dose rate effects (ELDRS), neutron and proton displacement damage, and single event effects (SEEs).

Problems caused by radiation edit

Environments with high levels of ionizing radiation create special design challenges. A single charged particle can knock thousands of electrons loose, causing electronic noise and signal spikes. In the case of digital circuits, this can cause results which are inaccurate or unintelligible. This is a particularly serious problem in the design of satellites, spacecraft, future quantum computers,[2][3][4] military aircraft, nuclear power stations, and nuclear weapons. In order to ensure the proper operation of such systems, manufacturers of integrated circuits and sensors intended for the military or aerospace markets employ various methods of radiation hardening. The resulting systems are said to be rad(iation)-hardened, rad-hard, or (within context) hardened.

Major radiation damage sources edit

Typical sources of exposure of electronics to ionizing radiation are the Van Allen radiation belts for satellites, nuclear reactors in power plants for sensors and control circuits, particle accelerators for control electronics particularly particle detector devices, residual radiation from isotopes in chip packaging materials, cosmic radiation for spacecraft and high-altitude aircraft, and nuclear explosions for potentially all military and civilian electronics.

  • Cosmic rays come from all directions and consist of approximately 85% protons, 14% alpha particles, and 1% heavy ions, together with X-ray and gamma-ray radiation. Most effects are caused by particles with energies between 0.1 and 20 GeV. The atmosphere filters most of these, so they are primarily a concern for spacecraft and high-altitude aircraft, but can also affect ordinary computers on the surface.[5][6]
  • Solar particle events come from the direction of the sun and consist of a large flux of high-energy (several GeV) protons and heavy ions, again accompanied by X-ray radiation.
  • Van Allen radiation belts contain electrons (up to about 10 MeV) and protons (up to 100s MeV) trapped in the geomagnetic field. The particle flux in the regions farther from the Earth can vary wildly depending on the actual conditions of the Sun and the magnetosphere. Due to their position they pose a concern for satellites.
  • Secondary particles result from interaction of other kinds of radiation with structures around the electronic devices.
  • Nuclear reactors produce gamma radiation and neutron radiation which can affect sensor and control circuits in nuclear power plants.
  • Particle accelerators produce high energy protons and electrons, and the secondary particles produced by their interactions produce significant radiation damage on sensitive control and particle detector components, of the order of magnitude of 10 MRad[Si]/year for systems such as the Large Hadron Collider.[7]
  • Nuclear explosions produce a short and extremely intense surge through a wide spectrum of electromagnetic radiation, an electromagnetic pulse (EMP), neutron radiation, and a flux of both primary and secondary charged particles. In case of a nuclear war they pose a potential concern for all civilian and military electronics.
  • Chip packaging materials were an insidious source of radiation that was found to be causing soft errors in new DRAM chips in the 1970s. Traces of radioactive elements in the packaging of the chips were producing alpha particles, which were then occasionally discharging some of the capacitors used to store the DRAM data bits. These effects have been reduced today by using purer packaging materials, and employing error-correcting codes to detect and often correct DRAM errors.

Radiation effects on electronics edit

Fundamental mechanisms edit

Two fundamental damage mechanisms take place:

Lattice displacement edit

Lattice displacement is caused by neutrons, protons, alpha particles, heavy ions, and very high energy gamma photons. They change the arrangement of the atoms in the crystal lattice, creating lasting damage, and increasing the number of recombination centers, depleting the minority carriers and worsening the analog properties of the affected semiconductor junctions. Counterintuitively, higher doses over short time cause partial annealing ("healing") of the damaged lattice, leading to a lower degree of damage than with the same doses delivered in low intensity over a long time (LDR or Low Dose Rate). This type of problem is particularly significant in bipolar transistors, which are dependent on minority carriers in their base regions; increased losses caused by recombination cause loss of the transistor gain (see neutron effects). Components certified as ELDRS (Enhanced Low Dose Rate Sensitive) free, do not show damage with fluxes below 0.01 rad(Si)/s = 36 rad(Si)/h.

Ionization effects edit

Ionization effects are caused by charged particles, including the ones with energy too low to cause lattice effects. The ionization effects are usually transient, creating glitches and soft errors, but can lead to destruction of the device if they trigger other damage mechanisms (e.g., a latchup). Photocurrent caused by ultraviolet and X-ray radiation may belong to this category as well. Gradual accumulation of holes in the oxide layer in MOSFET transistors leads to worsening of their performance, up to device failure when the dose is high enough (see total ionizing dose effects).

The effects can vary wildly depending on all the parameters – type of radiation, total dose and radiation flux, combination of types of radiation, and even the kind of device load (operating frequency, operating voltage, actual state of the transistor during the instant it is struck by the particle) – which makes thorough testing difficult, time-consuming, and requiring many test samples.

Resultant effects edit

The "end-user" effects can be characterized in several groups,

A neutron interacting with the semiconductor lattice will displace its atoms. This leads to an increase in the count of recombination centers and deep-level defects, reducing the lifetime of minority carriers, thus affecting bipolar devices more than CMOS ones. Bipolar devices on silicon tend to show changes in electrical parameters at levels of 1010 to 1011 neutrons/cm2, CMOS devices aren't affected until 1015 neutrons/cm2. The sensitivity of the devices may increase together with increasing level of integration and decreasing size of individual structures. There is also a risk of induced radioactivity caused by neutron activation, which is a major source of noise in high energy astrophysics instruments. Induced radiation, together with residual radiation from impurities in used materials, can cause all sorts of single-event problems during the device's lifetime. GaAs LEDs, common in optocouplers, are very sensitive to neutrons. The lattice damage influences the frequency of crystal oscillators. Kinetic energy effects (namely lattice displacement) of charged particles belong here too.

Total ionizing dose effects edit

The cumulative damage of the semiconductor lattice (lattice displacement damage) caused by ionizing radiation over the exposition time. It is measured in rads and causes slow gradual degradation of the device's performance. A total dose greater than 5000 rads delivered to silicon-based devices in seconds to minutes will cause long-term degradation. In CMOS devices, the radiation creates electron–hole pairs in the gate insulation layers, which cause photocurrents during their recombination, and the holes trapped in the lattice defects in the insulator create a persistent gate biasing and influence the transistors' threshold voltage, making the N-type MOSFET transistors easier and the P-type ones more difficult to switch on. The accumulated charge can be high enough to keep the transistors permanently open (or closed), leading to device failure. Some self-healing takes place over time, but this effect is not too significant. This effect is the same as hot carrier degradation in high-integration high-speed electronics. Crystal oscillators are somewhat sensitive to radiation doses, which alter their frequency. The sensitivity can be greatly reduced by using swept quartz. Natural quartz crystals are especially sensitive. Radiation performance curves for TID testing may be generated for all resultant effects testing procedures. These curves show performance trends throughout the TID test process and are included in the radiation test report.

Transient dose effects edit

The short-time high-intensity pulse of radiation, typically occurring during a nuclear explosion. The high radiation flux creates photocurrents in the entire body of the semiconductor, causing transistors to randomly open, changing logical states of flip-flops and memory cells. Permanent damage may occur if the duration of the pulse is too long, or if the pulse causes junction damage or a latchup. Latchups are commonly caused by the X-rays and gamma radiation flash of a nuclear explosion. Crystal oscillators may stop oscillating for the duration of the flash due to prompt photoconductivity induced in quartz.

Systems-generated EMP effects edit

SGEMP are caused by the radiation flash traveling through the equipment and causing local ionization and electric currents in the material of the chips, circuit boards, electrical cables and cases.

Digital damage: SEE edit

Single-event effects (SEE) have been studied extensively since the 1970s.[8] When a high-energy particle travels through a semiconductor, it leaves an ionized track behind. This ionization may cause a highly localized effect similar to the transient dose one - a benign glitch in output, a less benign bit flip in memory or a register or, especially in high-power transistors, a destructive latchup and burnout. Single event effects have importance for electronics in satellites, aircraft, and other civilian and military aerospace applications. Sometimes, in circuits not involving latches, it is helpful to introduce RC time constant circuits that slow down the circuit's reaction time beyond the duration of an SEE.

Single-event transient edit

SET happens when the charge collected from an ionization event discharges in the form of a spurious signal traveling through the circuit. This is de facto the effect of an electrostatic discharge. Soft error, reversible.

Single-event upset edit

Single-event upsets (SEU) or transient radiation effects in electronics are state changes of memory or register bits caused by a single ion interacting with the chip. They do not cause lasting damage to the device, but may cause lasting problems to a system which cannot recover from such an error. Soft error, reversible. In very sensitive devices, a single ion can cause a multiple-bit upset (MBU) in several adjacent memory cells. SEUs can become Single-event functional interrupts (SEFI) when they upset control circuits, such as state machines, placing the device into an undefined state, a test mode, or a halt, which would then need a reset or a power cycle to recover.

Single-event latchup edit

SEL can occur in any chip with a parasitic PNPN structure. A heavy ion or a high-energy proton passing through one of the two inner-transistor junctions can turn on the thyristor-like structure, which then stays "shorted" (an effect known as latch-up) until the device is power-cycled. As the effect can happen between the power source and substrate, destructively high current can be involved and the part may fail. Hard error, irreversible. Bulk CMOS devices are most susceptible.

Single-event snapback edit

Single-event snapback is similar to SEL but not requiring the PNPN structure, can be induced in N-channel MOS transistors switching large currents, when an ion hits near the drain junction and causes avalanche multiplication of the charge carriers. The transistor then opens and stays opened, a hard error, which is irreversible.

Single-event induced burnout edit

SEB may occur in power MOSFETs when the substrate right under the source region gets forward-biased and the drain-source voltage is higher than the breakdown voltage of the parasitic structures. The resulting high current and local overheating then may destroy the device. Hard error, irreversible.

Single-event gate rupture edit

SEGR was observed in power MOSFETs when a heavy ion hits the gate region while a high voltage is applied to the gate. A local breakdown then happens in the insulating layer of silicon dioxide, causing local overheat and destruction (looking like a microscopic explosion) of the gate region. It can occur even in EEPROM cells during write or erase, when the cells are subjected to a comparatively high voltage. Hard error, irreversible.

SEE testing edit

While proton beams are widely used for SEE testing due to availability, at lower energies proton irradiation can often underestimate SEE susceptibility. Furthermore, proton beams expose devices to risk of total ionizing dose (TID) failure which can cloud proton testing results or result in pre-mature device failure. White neutron beams—ostensibly the most representative SEE test method—are usually derived from solid target-based sources, resulting in flux non-uniformity and small beam areas. White neutron beams also have some measure of uncertainty in their energy spectrum, often with high thermal neutron content.

The disadvantages of both proton and spallation neutron sources can be avoided by using mono-energetic 14 MeV neutrons for SEE testing. A potential concern is that mono-energetic neutron-induced single event effects will not accurately represent the real-world effects of broad-spectrum atmospheric neutrons. However, recent studies have indicated that, to the contrary, mono-energetic neutrons—particularly 14 MeV neutrons—can be used to quite accurately understand SEE cross-sections in modern microelectronics.[9]

Radiation-hardening techniques edit

 
Radiation hardened die of the 1886VE10 microcontroller prior to metalization etching
 
Radiation hardened die of the 1886VE10 microcontroller after a metalization etching process has been used

Physical edit

Hardened chips are often manufactured on insulating substrates instead of the usual semiconductor wafers. Silicon on insulator (SOI) and silicon on sapphire (SOS) are commonly used. While normal commercial-grade chips can withstand between 50 and 100 gray (5 and 10 krad), space-grade SOI and SOS chips can survive doses between 1000 and 3000 gray (100 and 300 krad).[10][11] At one time many 4000 series chips were available in radiation-hardened versions (RadHard).[12] While SOI eliminates latchup events, TID and SEE hardness are not guaranteed to be improved.[13]

Bipolar integrated circuits generally have higher radiation tolerance than CMOS circuits. The low-power Schottky (LS) 5400 series can withstand 1000 krad, and many ECL devices can withstand 10 000 krad.[12]

Magnetoresistive RAM, or MRAM, is considered a likely candidate to provide radiation hardened, rewritable, non-volatile conductor memory. Physical principles and early tests suggest that MRAM is not susceptible to ionization-induced data loss.[14]

Capacitor-based DRAM is often replaced by more rugged (but larger, and more expensive) SRAM.

Choice of substrate with wide band gap, which gives it higher tolerance to deep-level defects; e.g. silicon carbide or gallium nitride.[citation needed]

Shielding the package against radioactivity, to reduce exposure of the bare device.[15]

Shielding the chips themselves (from neutrons) by use of depleted boron (consisting only of isotope boron-11) in the borophosphosilicate glass passivation layer protecting the chips, as naturally prevalent boron-10 readily captures neutrons and undergoes alpha decay (see soft error).

Use of a special process node to provide increased radiation resistance.[16] Due to the high development costs of new radiation hardened processes, the smallest "true" rad-hard (RHBP, Rad-Hard By Process) process is 150 nm as of 2016, however, rad-hard 65 nm FPGAs were available that used some of the techniques used in "true" rad-hard processes (RHBD, Rad-Hard By Design).[17] As of 2019 110 nm rad-hard processes are available.[18]

Use of SRAM cells with more transistors per cell than usual (which is 4T or 6T), which makes the cells more tolerant to SEUs at the cost of higher power consumption and size per cell.[19][17]

Use of Edge-less CMOS transistors, which have an unconventional physical construction, together with an unconventional physical layout.[20]

Logical edit

Error correcting code memory (ECC memory) uses redundant bits to check for and possibly correct corrupted data. Since radiation's effects damage the memory content even when the system is not accessing the RAM, a "scrubber" circuit must continuously sweep the RAM; reading out the data, checking the redundant bits for data errors, then writing back any corrections to the RAM.

Redundant elements can be used at the system level. Three separate microprocessor boards may independently compute an answer to a calculation and compare their answers. Any system that produces a minority result will recalculate. Logic may be added such that if repeated errors occur from the same system, that board is shut down.

Redundant elements may be used at the circuit level.[21] A single bit may be replaced with three bits and separate "voting logic" for each bit to continuously determine its result (triple modular redundancy). This increases area of a chip design by a factor of 5, so must be reserved for smaller designs. But it has the secondary advantage of also being "fail-safe" in real time. In the event of a single-bit failure (which may be unrelated to radiation), the voting logic will continue to produce the correct result without resorting to a watchdog timer. System level voting between three separate processor systems will generally need to use some circuit-level voting logic to perform the votes between the three processor systems.

Hardened latches may be used.[22]

A watchdog timer will perform a hard reset of a system unless some sequence is performed that generally indicates the system is alive, such as a write operation from an onboard processor. During normal operation, software schedules a write to the watchdog timer at regular intervals to prevent the timer from running out. If radiation causes the processor to operate incorrectly, it is unlikely the software will work correctly enough to clear the watchdog timer. The watchdog eventually times out and forces a hard reset to the system. This is considered a last resort to other methods of radiation hardening.

Military and space industry applications edit

Radiation-hardened and radiation tolerant components are often used in military and aerospace applications, including point-of-load (POL) applications, satellite system power supplies, step down switching regulators, microprocessors, FPGAs,[23] FPGA power sources, and high efficiency, low voltage subsystem power supplies.

However, not all military-grade components are radiation hardened. For example, the US MIL-STD-883 features many radiation-related tests, but has no specification for single event latchup frequency. The Fobos-Grunt space probe may have failed due to a similar assumption.[13]

The market size for radiation hardened electronics used in space applications was estimated to be $2.35 billion in 2021. A new study has estimated that this will reach approximately $4.76 billion by the year 2032.[24][25]

Nuclear hardness for telecommunication edit

In telecommunication, the term nuclear hardness has the following meanings: 1) an expression of the extent to which the performance of a system, facility, or device is expected to degrade in a given nuclear environment, 2) the physical attributes of a system or electronic component that will allow survival in an environment that includes nuclear radiation and electromagnetic pulses (EMP).

Notes edit

  1. Nuclear hardness may be expressed in terms of either susceptibility or vulnerability.
  2. The extent of expected performance degradation (e.g., outage time, data lost, and equipment damage) must be defined or specified. The environment (e.g., radiation levels, overpressure, peak velocities, energy absorbed, and electrical stress) must be defined or specified.
  3. The physical attributes of a system or component that will allow a defined degree of survivability in a given environment created by a nuclear weapon.
  4. Nuclear hardness is determined for specified or actual quantified environmental conditions and physical parameters, such as peak radiation levels, overpressure, velocities, energy absorbed, and electrical stress. It is achieved through design specifications and it is verified by test and analysis techniques.

Examples of rad-hard computers edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Messenger, George C. "Radiation hardening". AccessScience. doi:10.1036/1097-8542.566850.
  2. ^ "Quantum computers may be destroyed by high-energy particles from space". New Scientist. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
  3. ^ "Cosmic rays may soon stymie quantum computing". phys.org. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
  4. ^ Vepsäläinen, Antti P.; Karamlou, Amir H.; Orrell, John L.; Dogra, Akshunna S.; Loer, Ben; Vasconcelos, Francisca; Kim, David K.; Melville, Alexander J.; Niedzielski, Bethany M.; Yoder, Jonilyn L.; Gustavsson, Simon; Formaggio, Joseph A.; VanDevender, Brent A.; Oliver, William D. (August 2020). "Impact of ionizing radiation on superconducting qubit coherence". Nature. 584 (7822): 551–556. arXiv:2001.09190. Bibcode:2020Natur.584..551V. doi:10.1038/s41586-020-2619-8. ISSN 1476-4687. PMID 32848227. S2CID 210920566. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
  5. ^ Ziegler, J. F.; Lanford, W. A. (16 November 1979). "Effect of Cosmic Rays on Computer Memories". Science. 206 (4420): 776–788. Bibcode:1979Sci...206..776Z. doi:10.1126/science.206.4420.776. PMID 17820742. S2CID 2000982.
  6. ^ Ziegler, J. F.; Lanford, W. A. (June 1981). "The effect of sea level cosmic rays on electronic devices". Journal of Applied Physics. 52 (6): 4305–4312. Bibcode:1981JAP....52.4305Z. doi:10.1063/1.329243.
  7. ^ Brugger, M. (May 2012). Radiation Damage to Electronics at the LHC. 3rd International Particle Accelerator Conference. New Orleans, Louisiana. pp. THPPP006.
  8. ^ Messenger, G.C.; Ash, Milton (2013-11-27). Single Event Phenomena. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. xii–xiii. ISBN 978-1-4615-6043-2.
  9. ^ Normand, Eugene; Dominik, Laura (20–23 July 2010). "Cross Comparison Guide for Results of Neutron SEE Testing of Microelectronics Applicable to Avionics". 2010 IEEE Radiation Effects Data Workshop. 2010 IEEE Radiation Effects Data Workshop. p. 8. doi:10.1109/REDW.2010.5619496. ISBN 978-1-4244-8405-8.
  10. ^ Microsemi Corporation (March 2012), RTSX-SU Radiation-Tolerant FPGAs (UMC) (PDF) (Datasheet), retrieved May 30, 2021
  11. ^ Atmel Corporation (2008), Rad Hard 16 MegaBit 3.3V SRAM MultiChip Module AT68166H (PDF) (Datasheet), retrieved May 30, 2021
  12. ^ a b Leppälä, Kari; Verkasalo, Raimo (17–23 September 1989). Protection of Instrument Control Computers against Soft and Hard Errors and Cosmic Ray Effects. International Seminar on Space Scientific Engineering. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.48.1291.
  13. ^ a b Shunkov, >V. "Common misconceptions about space-grade integrated circuits". habr.com.
  14. ^ Wang, B.; Wang, Z.; Hu, C.; Zhao, Y.; Zhang, Y.; Zhao, W. (2018). "Radiation Hardening Techniques for SOT-MRAM Peripheral Circuitry". 2018 IEEE International Magnetics Conference (INTERMAG). 2018 IEEE International Magnetics Conference (INTERMAG). pp. 1–2. doi:10.1109/INTMAG.2018.8508368. ISBN 978-1-5386-6425-4.
  15. ^ "StackPath".
  16. ^ "The other Atmel: Radiation Hardened Sparc CPU's | the CPU Shack Museum". 27 July 2009.
  17. ^ a b "Avnet: Quality Electronic Components & Services" (PDF).
  18. ^ "Aerospace & Defense Solutions" (PDF). Onsemi.
  19. ^ Tiehu Li; Yintang Yang; Junan Zhang; Jia Liu. "A novel SEU hardened SRAM bit-cell design". IEICE Electronics Express. 14 (12): 1–8.
  20. ^ Benigni, Marcello; Liberali, Valentino; Stabile, Alberto; Calligaro, Cristiano (2010). Design of rad-hard SRAM cells: A comparative study. 27th International Conference on Microelectronics Proceedings. doi:10.1109/miel.2010.5490481.
  21. ^ Platteter, Dale G. (October 1980). Protection of LSI Microprocessors using Triple Modular Redundancy. International IEEE Symposium on Fault Tolerant Computing.
  22. ^ Krishnamohan, Srivathsan; Mahapatra, Nihar R. (2005). "Analysis and design of soft-error hardened latches". Proceedings of the 15th ACM Great Lakes symposium on VLSI - GLSVSLI '05. Proceedings of the 15th ACM Great Lakes symposium on VLSI. p. 328. doi:10.1145/1057661.1057740. ISBN 1595930574.
  23. ^ Mil & Aero Staff (2016-06-03). "FPGA development devices for radiation-hardened space applications introduced by Microsemi". Military & Aerospace Electronics. Retrieved 2018-11-02.
  24. ^ Diagle, Lisa (2022-06-17). "Rad-hard electronics for space to reach $4.76 billion by 2032, study says". Military Embedded Systems. Retrieved 2022-06-18.
  25. ^ https://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/5589889/radiation-hardened-electronics-for-space
  26. ^ . Aitech Rugged COTS Solutions. 2013-12-15. Archived from the original on 2014-06-23.
  27. ^ Broad Reach Engineering Website
  28. ^ "Single Board Computer (SBC) Family". Cobham. from the original on 2019-04-08. Retrieved 2018-11-02.
  29. ^ "VA10820 - Radiation Hardened ARM Cortex-M0 MCU". Vorago Technologies. from the original on 2019-02-14. Retrieved 2018-11-02.
  30. ^ Powell, Wesley A. (2018-11-13). High-Performance Spaceflight Computing (HPSC) Project Overview (PDF). NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) (Report).
  31. ^ ESA DAHLIA
  32. ^ "NOEL-V Processor". Cobham Gaisler. Retrieved 14 January 2020.
  33. ^ "NASA Makes RISC-V the Go-to Ecosystem for Future Space Missions". sifive. 2022-09-22.
  34. ^ "NASA JPL Selects Microchip for Game-Changing Spaceflight Computing Processor". microchip. 2022-09-27.
  35. ^ "NASA Awards Next-Generation Spaceflight Computing Processor Contract". nasa. 2022-08-15.

Books and Reports edit

  • Calligaro, Christiano; Gatti, Umberto (2018). Rad-hard Semiconductor Memories. River Publishers Series in Electronic Materials and Devices. River Publishers. ISBN 978-8770220200.
  • Holmes-Siedle, Andrew; Adams, Len (2002). Handbook of Radiation Effects (Second ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-850733-X.
  • León-Florian, E.; Schönbacher, H.; Tavlet, M. (1993). Data compilation of dosimetry methods and radiation sources for material testing (Report). CERN Technical Inspection and Safety Commission. CERN-TIS-CFM-IR-93-03.
  • Ma, Tso-Ping; Dressendorfer, Paul V. (1989). Ionizing Radiation Effects in MOS Devices and Circuits. New York: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0-471-84893-X.
  • Messenger, George C.; Ash, Milton S. (1992). The Effects of Radiation on Electronic Systems (Second ed.). New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold. ISBN 0-442-23952-1.
  • Oldham, Timothy R. (2000). Ionizing Radiation Effects in MOS Oxides. International Series on Advances in Solid State Electronics and Technology. World Scientific. doi:10.1142/3655. ISBN 978-981-02-3326-6.
  • Platteter, Dale G. (2006). Archive of Radiation Effects Short Course Notebooks (1980–2006). IEEE. ISBN 1-4244-0304-9.
  • Schrimpf, Ronald D.; Fleetwood, Daniel M. (July 2004). Radiation Effects and Soft Errors in Integrated Circuits and Electronic Devices. Selected Topics in Electronics and Systems. Vol. 34. World Scientific. doi:10.1142/5607. ISBN 978-981-238-940-4.
  • Schroder, Dieter K. (1990). Semiconductor Material and Device Characterization. New York: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0-471-51104-8.
  • Schulman, James Herbert; Compton, Walter Dale (1962). Color Centers in Solids. International Series of Monographs on Solid State Physics. Vol. 2. Pergamon Press.
  • Holmes-Siedle, Andrew; van Lint, Victor A. J. (2000). "Radiation Effects in Electronic Materials and Devices". In Meyers, Robert A. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Physical Science and Technology. Vol. 13 (Third ed.). New York: Academic Press. ISBN 0-12-227423-7.
  • van Lint, Victor A. J.; Flanagan, Terry M.; Leadon, Roland Eugene; Naber, James Allen; Rogers, Vern C. (1980). Mechanisms of Radiation Effects in Electronic Materials. Vol. 1. New York: John Wiley & Sons. p. 13073. Bibcode:1980STIA...8113073V. ISBN 0-471-04106-8. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  • Watkins, George D. (1986). "The Lattice Vacancy in Silicon". In Pantelides, Sokrates T. (ed.). Deep Centers in Semiconductors: A State-of-the-Art Approach (Second ed.). New York: Gordon and Breach. ISBN 2-88124-109-3.
  • Watts, Stephen J. (1997). "Overview of radiation damage in silicon detectors — Models and defect engineering". Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A. 386 (1): 149–155. Bibcode:1997NIMPA.386..149W. doi:10.1016/S0168-9002(96)01110-2.
  • Ziegler, James F.; Biersack, Jochen P.; Littmark, Uffe (1985). The Stopping and Range of Ions in Solids. Vol. 1. New York: Pergamon Press. ISBN 0-08-021603-X.

External links edit

  • Federal Standard 1037C (link 2011-03-01 at the Wayback Machine)
  • – By Chad Thibodeau, Maxwell Technologies; COTS Journal, Dec 2003
  • Sandia Labs to develop (...) radiation-hardened Pentium (...) for space and defense needs – Sandia press release, 8 Dec 1998
    (also includes a general "backgrounder" section on Sandia's manufacturing processes for radiation-hardening of microelectronics)
  • Vanderbilt University Institute for Space and Defense Electronics

radiation, hardening, confused, with, hard, radiation, radiation, embrittlement, hardening, materials, caused, radiation, radiation, damage, process, making, electronic, components, circuits, resistant, damage, malfunction, caused, high, levels, ionizing, radi. Not to be confused with hard radiation or radiation embrittlement For hardening of materials caused by radiation see radiation damage Radiation hardening is the process of making electronic components and circuits resistant to damage or malfunction caused by high levels of ionizing radiation particle radiation and high energy electromagnetic radiation 1 especially for environments in outer space especially beyond the low Earth orbit around nuclear reactors and particle accelerators or during nuclear accidents or nuclear warfare Most semiconductor electronic components are susceptible to radiation damage and radiation hardened rad hard components are based on their non hardened equivalents with some design and manufacturing variations that reduce the susceptibility to radiation damage Due to the extensive development and testing required to produce a radiation tolerant design of a microelectronic chip the technology of radiation hardened chips tends to lag behind the most recent developments Radiation hardened products are typically tested to one or more resultant effects tests including total ionizing dose TID enhanced low dose rate effects ELDRS neutron and proton displacement damage and single event effects SEEs Contents 1 Problems caused by radiation 2 Major radiation damage sources 3 Radiation effects on electronics 3 1 Fundamental mechanisms 3 1 1 Lattice displacement 3 1 2 Ionization effects 3 2 Resultant effects 3 2 1 Total ionizing dose effects 3 2 2 Transient dose effects 3 2 3 Systems generated EMP effects 3 3 Digital damage SEE 3 3 1 Single event transient 3 3 2 Single event upset 3 3 3 Single event latchup 3 3 4 Single event snapback 3 3 5 Single event induced burnout 3 3 6 Single event gate rupture 3 4 SEE testing 4 Radiation hardening techniques 4 1 Physical 4 2 Logical 5 Military and space industry applications 6 Nuclear hardness for telecommunication 6 1 Notes 7 Examples of rad hard computers 8 See also 9 References 10 Books and Reports 11 External linksProblems caused by radiation editSee also Radiation damage Environments with high levels of ionizing radiation create special design challenges A single charged particle can knock thousands of electrons loose causing electronic noise and signal spikes In the case of digital circuits this can cause results which are inaccurate or unintelligible This is a particularly serious problem in the design of satellites spacecraft future quantum computers 2 3 4 military aircraft nuclear power stations and nuclear weapons In order to ensure the proper operation of such systems manufacturers of integrated circuits and sensors intended for the military or aerospace markets employ various methods of radiation hardening The resulting systems are said to be rad iation hardened rad hard or within context hardened Major radiation damage sources editTypical sources of exposure of electronics to ionizing radiation are the Van Allen radiation belts for satellites nuclear reactors in power plants for sensors and control circuits particle accelerators for control electronics particularly particle detector devices residual radiation from isotopes in chip packaging materials cosmic radiation for spacecraft and high altitude aircraft and nuclear explosions for potentially all military and civilian electronics Cosmic rays come from all directions and consist of approximately 85 protons 14 alpha particles and 1 heavy ions together with X ray and gamma ray radiation Most effects are caused by particles with energies between 0 1 and 20 GeV The atmosphere filters most of these so they are primarily a concern for spacecraft and high altitude aircraft but can also affect ordinary computers on the surface 5 6 Solar particle events come from the direction of the sun and consist of a large flux of high energy several GeV protons and heavy ions again accompanied by X ray radiation Van Allen radiation belts contain electrons up to about 10 MeV and protons up to 100s MeV trapped in the geomagnetic field The particle flux in the regions farther from the Earth can vary wildly depending on the actual conditions of the Sun and the magnetosphere Due to their position they pose a concern for satellites Secondary particles result from interaction of other kinds of radiation with structures around the electronic devices Nuclear reactors produce gamma radiation and neutron radiation which can affect sensor and control circuits in nuclear power plants Particle accelerators produce high energy protons and electrons and the secondary particles produced by their interactions produce significant radiation damage on sensitive control and particle detector components of the order of magnitude of 10 MRad Si year for systems such as the Large Hadron Collider 7 Nuclear explosions produce a short and extremely intense surge through a wide spectrum of electromagnetic radiation an electromagnetic pulse EMP neutron radiation and a flux of both primary and secondary charged particles In case of a nuclear war they pose a potential concern for all civilian and military electronics Chip packaging materials were an insidious source of radiation that was found to be causing soft errors in new DRAM chips in the 1970s Traces of radioactive elements in the packaging of the chips were producing alpha particles which were then occasionally discharging some of the capacitors used to store the DRAM data bits These effects have been reduced today by using purer packaging materials and employing error correcting codes to detect and often correct DRAM errors Radiation effects on electronics editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Fundamental mechanisms edit Two fundamental damage mechanisms take place Lattice displacement edit Lattice displacement is caused by neutrons protons alpha particles heavy ions and very high energy gamma photons They change the arrangement of the atoms in the crystal lattice creating lasting damage and increasing the number of recombination centers depleting the minority carriers and worsening the analog properties of the affected semiconductor junctions Counterintuitively higher doses over short time cause partial annealing healing of the damaged lattice leading to a lower degree of damage than with the same doses delivered in low intensity over a long time LDR or Low Dose Rate This type of problem is particularly significant in bipolar transistors which are dependent on minority carriers in their base regions increased losses caused by recombination cause loss of the transistor gain see neutron effects Components certified as ELDRS Enhanced Low Dose Rate Sensitive free do not show damage with fluxes below 0 01 rad Si s 36 rad Si h Ionization effects edit Ionization effects are caused by charged particles including the ones with energy too low to cause lattice effects The ionization effects are usually transient creating glitches and soft errors but can lead to destruction of the device if they trigger other damage mechanisms e g a latchup Photocurrent caused by ultraviolet and X ray radiation may belong to this category as well Gradual accumulation of holes in the oxide layer in MOSFET transistors leads to worsening of their performance up to device failure when the dose is high enough see total ionizing dose effects The effects can vary wildly depending on all the parameters type of radiation total dose and radiation flux combination of types of radiation and even the kind of device load operating frequency operating voltage actual state of the transistor during the instant it is struck by the particle which makes thorough testing difficult time consuming and requiring many test samples Resultant effects edit The end user effects can be characterized in several groups A neutron interacting with the semiconductor lattice will displace its atoms This leads to an increase in the count of recombination centers and deep level defects reducing the lifetime of minority carriers thus affecting bipolar devices more than CMOS ones Bipolar devices on silicon tend to show changes in electrical parameters at levels of 1010 to 1011 neutrons cm2 CMOS devices aren t affected until 1015 neutrons cm2 The sensitivity of the devices may increase together with increasing level of integration and decreasing size of individual structures There is also a risk of induced radioactivity caused by neutron activation which is a major source of noise in high energy astrophysics instruments Induced radiation together with residual radiation from impurities in used materials can cause all sorts of single event problems during the device s lifetime GaAs LEDs common in optocouplers are very sensitive to neutrons The lattice damage influences the frequency of crystal oscillators Kinetic energy effects namely lattice displacement of charged particles belong here too Total ionizing dose effects edit The cumulative damage of the semiconductor lattice lattice displacement damage caused by ionizing radiation over the exposition time It is measured in rads and causes slow gradual degradation of the device s performance A total dose greater than 5000 rads delivered to silicon based devices in seconds to minutes will cause long term degradation In CMOS devices the radiation creates electron hole pairs in the gate insulation layers which cause photocurrents during their recombination and the holes trapped in the lattice defects in the insulator create a persistent gate biasing and influence the transistors threshold voltage making the N type MOSFET transistors easier and the P type ones more difficult to switch on The accumulated charge can be high enough to keep the transistors permanently open or closed leading to device failure Some self healing takes place over time but this effect is not too significant This effect is the same as hot carrier degradation in high integration high speed electronics Crystal oscillators are somewhat sensitive to radiation doses which alter their frequency The sensitivity can be greatly reduced by using swept quartz Natural quartz crystals are especially sensitive Radiation performance curves for TID testing may be generated for all resultant effects testing procedures These curves show performance trends throughout the TID test process and are included in the radiation test report Transient dose effects edit The short time high intensity pulse of radiation typically occurring during a nuclear explosion The high radiation flux creates photocurrents in the entire body of the semiconductor causing transistors to randomly open changing logical states of flip flops and memory cells Permanent damage may occur if the duration of the pulse is too long or if the pulse causes junction damage or a latchup Latchups are commonly caused by the X rays and gamma radiation flash of a nuclear explosion Crystal oscillators may stop oscillating for the duration of the flash due to prompt photoconductivity induced in quartz Systems generated EMP effects edit SGEMP are caused by the radiation flash traveling through the equipment and causing local ionization and electric currents in the material of the chips circuit boards electrical cables and cases Digital damage SEE edit Single event effects SEE have been studied extensively since the 1970s 8 When a high energy particle travels through a semiconductor it leaves an ionized track behind This ionization may cause a highly localized effect similar to the transient dose one a benign glitch in output a less benign bit flip in memory or a register or especially in high power transistors a destructive latchup and burnout Single event effects have importance for electronics in satellites aircraft and other civilian and military aerospace applications Sometimes in circuits not involving latches it is helpful to introduce RC time constant circuits that slow down the circuit s reaction time beyond the duration of an SEE Single event transient edit SET happens when the charge collected from an ionization event discharges in the form of a spurious signal traveling through the circuit This is de facto the effect of an electrostatic discharge Soft error reversible Single event upset edit Single event upsets SEU or transient radiation effects in electronics are state changes of memory or register bits caused by a single ion interacting with the chip They do not cause lasting damage to the device but may cause lasting problems to a system which cannot recover from such an error Soft error reversible In very sensitive devices a single ion can cause a multiple bit upset MBU in several adjacent memory cells SEUs can become Single event functional interrupts SEFI when they upset control circuits such as state machines placing the device into an undefined state a test mode or a halt which would then need a reset or a power cycle to recover Single event latchup edit SEL can occur in any chip with a parasitic PNPN structure A heavy ion or a high energy proton passing through one of the two inner transistor junctions can turn on the thyristor like structure which then stays shorted an effect known as latch up until the device is power cycled As the effect can happen between the power source and substrate destructively high current can be involved and the part may fail Hard error irreversible Bulk CMOS devices are most susceptible Single event snapback edit Single event snapback is similar to SEL but not requiring the PNPN structure can be induced in N channel MOS transistors switching large currents when an ion hits near the drain junction and causes avalanche multiplication of the charge carriers The transistor then opens and stays opened a hard error which is irreversible Single event induced burnout edit SEB may occur in power MOSFETs when the substrate right under the source region gets forward biased and the drain source voltage is higher than the breakdown voltage of the parasitic structures The resulting high current and local overheating then may destroy the device Hard error irreversible Single event gate rupture edit SEGR was observed in power MOSFETs when a heavy ion hits the gate region while a high voltage is applied to the gate A local breakdown then happens in the insulating layer of silicon dioxide causing local overheat and destruction looking like a microscopic explosion of the gate region It can occur even in EEPROM cells during write or erase when the cells are subjected to a comparatively high voltage Hard error irreversible SEE testing edit While proton beams are widely used for SEE testing due to availability at lower energies proton irradiation can often underestimate SEE susceptibility Furthermore proton beams expose devices to risk of total ionizing dose TID failure which can cloud proton testing results or result in pre mature device failure White neutron beams ostensibly the most representative SEE test method are usually derived from solid target based sources resulting in flux non uniformity and small beam areas White neutron beams also have some measure of uncertainty in their energy spectrum often with high thermal neutron content The disadvantages of both proton and spallation neutron sources can be avoided by using mono energetic 14 MeV neutrons for SEE testing A potential concern is that mono energetic neutron induced single event effects will not accurately represent the real world effects of broad spectrum atmospheric neutrons However recent studies have indicated that to the contrary mono energetic neutrons particularly 14 MeV neutrons can be used to quite accurately understand SEE cross sections in modern microelectronics 9 Radiation hardening techniques edit nbsp Radiation hardened die of the 1886VE10 microcontroller prior to metalization etching nbsp Radiation hardened die of the 1886VE10 microcontroller after a metalization etching process has been used Physical edit Hardened chips are often manufactured on insulating substrates instead of the usual semiconductor wafers Silicon on insulator SOI and silicon on sapphire SOS are commonly used While normal commercial grade chips can withstand between 50 and 100 gray 5 and 10 krad space grade SOI and SOS chips can survive doses between 1000 and 3000 gray 100 and 300 krad 10 11 At one time many 4000 series chips were available in radiation hardened versions RadHard 12 While SOI eliminates latchup events TID and SEE hardness are not guaranteed to be improved 13 Bipolar integrated circuits generally have higher radiation tolerance than CMOS circuits The low power Schottky LS 5400 series can withstand 1000 krad and many ECL devices can withstand 10 000 krad 12 Magnetoresistive RAM or MRAM is considered a likely candidate to provide radiation hardened rewritable non volatile conductor memory Physical principles and early tests suggest that MRAM is not susceptible to ionization induced data loss 14 Capacitor based DRAM is often replaced by more rugged but larger and more expensive SRAM Choice of substrate with wide band gap which gives it higher tolerance to deep level defects e g silicon carbide or gallium nitride citation needed Shielding the package against radioactivity to reduce exposure of the bare device 15 Shielding the chips themselves from neutrons by use of depleted boron consisting only of isotope boron 11 in the borophosphosilicate glass passivation layer protecting the chips as naturally prevalent boron 10 readily captures neutrons and undergoes alpha decay see soft error Use of a special process node to provide increased radiation resistance 16 Due to the high development costs of new radiation hardened processes the smallest true rad hard RHBP Rad Hard By Process process is 150 nm as of 2016 however rad hard 65 nm FPGAs were available that used some of the techniques used in true rad hard processes RHBD Rad Hard By Design 17 As of 2019 110 nm rad hard processes are available 18 Use of SRAM cells with more transistors per cell than usual which is 4T or 6T which makes the cells more tolerant to SEUs at the cost of higher power consumption and size per cell 19 17 Use of Edge less CMOS transistors which have an unconventional physical construction together with an unconventional physical layout 20 Logical edit Error correcting code memory ECC memory uses redundant bits to check for and possibly correct corrupted data Since radiation s effects damage the memory content even when the system is not accessing the RAM a scrubber circuit must continuously sweep the RAM reading out the data checking the redundant bits for data errors then writing back any corrections to the RAM Redundant elements can be used at the system level Three separate microprocessor boards may independently compute an answer to a calculation and compare their answers Any system that produces a minority result will recalculate Logic may be added such that if repeated errors occur from the same system that board is shut down Redundant elements may be used at the circuit level 21 A single bit may be replaced with three bits and separate voting logic for each bit to continuously determine its result triple modular redundancy This increases area of a chip design by a factor of 5 so must be reserved for smaller designs But it has the secondary advantage of also being fail safe in real time In the event of a single bit failure which may be unrelated to radiation the voting logic will continue to produce the correct result without resorting to a watchdog timer System level voting between three separate processor systems will generally need to use some circuit level voting logic to perform the votes between the three processor systems Hardened latches may be used 22 A watchdog timer will perform a hard reset of a system unless some sequence is performed that generally indicates the system is alive such as a write operation from an onboard processor During normal operation software schedules a write to the watchdog timer at regular intervals to prevent the timer from running out If radiation causes the processor to operate incorrectly it is unlikely the software will work correctly enough to clear the watchdog timer The watchdog eventually times out and forces a hard reset to the system This is considered a last resort to other methods of radiation hardening Military and space industry applications editRadiation hardened and radiation tolerant components are often used in military and aerospace applications including point of load POL applications satellite system power supplies step down switching regulators microprocessors FPGAs 23 FPGA power sources and high efficiency low voltage subsystem power supplies However not all military grade components are radiation hardened For example the US MIL STD 883 features many radiation related tests but has no specification for single event latchup frequency The Fobos Grunt space probe may have failed due to a similar assumption 13 The market size for radiation hardened electronics used in space applications was estimated to be 2 35 billion in 2021 A new study has estimated that this will reach approximately 4 76 billion by the year 2032 24 25 Nuclear hardness for telecommunication editIn telecommunication the term nuclear hardness has the following meanings 1 an expression of the extent to which the performance of a system facility or device is expected to degrade in a given nuclear environment 2 the physical attributes of a system or electronic component that will allow survival in an environment that includes nuclear radiation and electromagnetic pulses EMP Notes edit Nuclear hardness may be expressed in terms of either susceptibility or vulnerability The extent of expected performance degradation e g outage time data lost and equipment damage must be defined or specified The environment e g radiation levels overpressure peak velocities energy absorbed and electrical stress must be defined or specified The physical attributes of a system or component that will allow a defined degree of survivability in a given environment created by a nuclear weapon Nuclear hardness is determined for specified or actual quantified environmental conditions and physical parameters such as peak radiation levels overpressure velocities energy absorbed and electrical stress It is achieved through design specifications and it is verified by test and analysis techniques Examples of rad hard computers editThe System 4 Pi made by IBM and used on board the Space Shuttle AP 101 variant is based on the System 360 architecture The RCA1802 8 bit CPU introduced in 1976 was the first serially produced radiation hardened microprocessor PIC 1886VE Russian 50 MHz microcontroller designed by Milandr and manufactured by Sitronics Mikron on 180 nm bulk silicon technology m68k based The Coldfire M5208 used by General Dynamics is a low power 1 5 W radiation hardened alternative MIL STD 1750A based The RH1750 manufactured by GEC Plessey The Proton 100k SBC by Space Micro Inc introduced in 2003 uses an updated voting scheme called TTMR which mitigates single event upset SEU in a single processor The processor is Equator BSP 15 The Proton200k SBC by Space Micro Inc introduced in 2004 mitigates SEU with its patented time triple modular redundancy TTMR technology and single event function interrupts SEFI with H Core technology The processor is the high speed Texas Instruments 320C6Xx series digital signal processor The Proton200k operates at 4000 MIPS while mitigating SEU MIPS based The RH32 is produced by Honeywell Aerospace The Mongoose V used by NASA is a 32 bit microprocessor for spacecraft onboard computer applications i e New Horizons The KOMDIV 32 is a 32 bit microprocessor compatible with MIPS R3000 developed by NIISI manufactured by Kurchatov Institute Russia PowerPC POWER based The RAD6000 single board computer SBC produced by BAE Systems includes a rad hard POWER1 CPU The RHPPC is produced by Honeywell Aerospace Based on hardened PowerPC 603e The SP0 and SP0 S are produced by Aitech Defense Systems is a 3U cPCI SBC which utilizes the SOI PowerQUICC III MPC8548E PowerPC e500 based capable of processing speeds ranging from 833 MHz to 1 18 GHz 26 The Proton400k SBC by Space Micro Inc a Freescale P2020 cpu based on PowerPC e500 The RAD750 SBC also produced by BAE Systems and based on the PowerPC 750 processor is the successor to the RAD6000 The SCS750 built by Maxwell Technologies which votes three PowerPC 750 cores against each other to mitigate radiation effects Seven of those are used by the Gaia spacecraft The Boeing Company through its Satellite Development Center produces a radiation hardened space computer variant based on the PowerPC 750 The BRE440 by Broad Reach Engineering IBM PPC440 core based system on a chip 266 MIPS PCI 2x Ethernet 2x UARTS DMA controller L1 L2 cache 27 The RAD5500 processor is the successor to the RAD750 based on the PowerPC e5500 SPARC based The ERC32 and LEON 2 3 4 and 5 are radiation hardened processors designed by Gaisler Research and the European Space Agency They are described in synthesizable VHDL available under the GNU Lesser General Public License and GNU General Public License respectively The Gen 6 single board computer SBC produced by Cobham Semiconductor Solutions formerly Aeroflex Microelectronics Solutions enabled for the LEON microprocessor 28 ARM based The Vorago VA10820 a 32 bit ARMv6 M Cortex M0 29 NASA and the United States Air Force are developing HPSC a Cortex A53 based processor for future spacecraft use 30 ESA DAHLIA a Cortex R52 based processor 31 RISC V based Cobham Gaisler NOEL V 64 bit 32 NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory has selected Microchip Technology to develop a new HPSC processor based on SiFive Intelligence X280 33 34 35 See also Comparison of embedded computer systems on board the Mars roversSee also edit nbsp Electronics portal Communications survivability EMC aware programming Institute for Space and Defense Electronics Vanderbilt University Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter MESSENGER Mercury probe Mars rovers Tempest codename Juno Radiation VaultReferences edit Messenger George C Radiation hardening AccessScience doi 10 1036 1097 8542 566850 Quantum computers may be destroyed by high energy particles from space New Scientist Retrieved 7 September 2020 Cosmic rays may soon stymie quantum computing phys org Retrieved 7 September 2020 Vepsalainen Antti P Karamlou Amir H Orrell John L Dogra Akshunna S Loer Ben Vasconcelos Francisca Kim David K Melville Alexander J Niedzielski Bethany M Yoder Jonilyn L Gustavsson Simon Formaggio Joseph A VanDevender Brent A Oliver William D August 2020 Impact of ionizing radiation on superconducting qubit coherence Nature 584 7822 551 556 arXiv 2001 09190 Bibcode 2020Natur 584 551V doi 10 1038 s41586 020 2619 8 ISSN 1476 4687 PMID 32848227 S2CID 210920566 Retrieved 7 September 2020 Ziegler J F Lanford W A 16 November 1979 Effect of Cosmic Rays on Computer Memories Science 206 4420 776 788 Bibcode 1979Sci 206 776Z doi 10 1126 science 206 4420 776 PMID 17820742 S2CID 2000982 Ziegler J F Lanford W A June 1981 The effect of sea level cosmic rays on electronic devices Journal of Applied Physics 52 6 4305 4312 Bibcode 1981JAP 52 4305Z doi 10 1063 1 329243 Brugger M May 2012 Radiation Damage to Electronics at the LHC 3rd International Particle Accelerator Conference New Orleans Louisiana pp THPPP006 Messenger G C Ash Milton 2013 11 27 Single Event Phenomena Springer Science amp Business Media pp xii xiii ISBN 978 1 4615 6043 2 Normand Eugene Dominik Laura 20 23 July 2010 Cross Comparison Guide for Results of Neutron SEE Testing of Microelectronics Applicable to Avionics 2010 IEEE Radiation Effects Data Workshop 2010 IEEE Radiation Effects Data Workshop p 8 doi 10 1109 REDW 2010 5619496 ISBN 978 1 4244 8405 8 Microsemi Corporation March 2012 RTSX SU Radiation Tolerant FPGAs UMC PDF Datasheet retrieved May 30 2021 Atmel Corporation 2008 Rad Hard 16 MegaBit 3 3V SRAM MultiChip Module AT68166H PDF Datasheet retrieved May 30 2021 a b Leppala Kari Verkasalo Raimo 17 23 September 1989 Protection of Instrument Control Computers against Soft and Hard Errors and Cosmic Ray Effects International Seminar on Space Scientific Engineering CiteSeerX 10 1 1 48 1291 a b Shunkov gt V Common misconceptions about space grade integrated circuits habr com Wang B Wang Z Hu C Zhao Y Zhang Y Zhao W 2018 Radiation Hardening Techniques for SOT MRAM Peripheral Circuitry 2018 IEEE International Magnetics Conference INTERMAG 2018 IEEE International Magnetics Conference INTERMAG pp 1 2 doi 10 1109 INTMAG 2018 8508368 ISBN 978 1 5386 6425 4 StackPath The other Atmel Radiation Hardened Sparc CPU s the CPU Shack Museum 27 July 2009 a b Avnet Quality Electronic Components amp Services PDF Aerospace amp Defense Solutions PDF Onsemi Tiehu Li Yintang Yang Junan Zhang Jia Liu A novel SEU hardened SRAM bit cell design IEICE Electronics Express 14 12 1 8 Benigni Marcello Liberali Valentino Stabile Alberto Calligaro Cristiano 2010 Design of rad hard SRAM cells A comparative study 27th International Conference on Microelectronics Proceedings doi 10 1109 miel 2010 5490481 Platteter Dale G October 1980 Protection of LSI Microprocessors using Triple Modular Redundancy International IEEE Symposium on Fault Tolerant Computing Krishnamohan Srivathsan Mahapatra Nihar R 2005 Analysis and design of soft error hardened latches Proceedings of the 15th ACM Great Lakes symposium on VLSI GLSVSLI 05 Proceedings of the 15th ACM Great Lakes symposium on VLSI p 328 doi 10 1145 1057661 1057740 ISBN 1595930574 Mil amp Aero Staff 2016 06 03 FPGA development devices for radiation hardened space applications introduced by Microsemi Military amp Aerospace Electronics Retrieved 2018 11 02 Diagle Lisa 2022 06 17 Rad hard electronics for space to reach 4 76 billion by 2032 study says Military Embedded Systems Retrieved 2022 06 18 https www researchandmarkets com reports 5589889 radiation hardened electronics for space SP0 3U CompactPCI Radiation Tolerant PowerPC SBC Aitech Rugged COTS Solutions 2013 12 15 Archived from the original on 2014 06 23 Broad Reach Engineering Website Single Board Computer SBC Family Cobham Archived from the original on 2019 04 08 Retrieved 2018 11 02 VA10820 Radiation Hardened ARM Cortex M0 MCU Vorago Technologies Archived from the original on 2019 02 14 Retrieved 2018 11 02 Powell Wesley A 2018 11 13 High Performance Spaceflight Computing HPSC Project Overview PDF NASA Technical Reports Server NTRS Report ESA DAHLIA NOEL V Processor Cobham Gaisler Retrieved 14 January 2020 NASA Makes RISC V the Go to Ecosystem for Future Space Missions sifive 2022 09 22 NASA JPL Selects Microchip for Game Changing Spaceflight Computing Processor microchip 2022 09 27 NASA Awards Next Generation Spaceflight Computing Processor Contract nasa 2022 08 15 Books and Reports editCalligaro Christiano Gatti Umberto 2018 Rad hard Semiconductor Memories River Publishers Series in Electronic Materials and Devices River Publishers ISBN 978 8770220200 Holmes Siedle Andrew Adams Len 2002 Handbook of Radiation Effects Second ed Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 850733 X Leon Florian E Schonbacher H Tavlet M 1993 Data compilation of dosimetry methods and radiation sources for material testing Report CERN Technical Inspection and Safety Commission CERN TIS CFM IR 93 03 Ma Tso Ping Dressendorfer Paul V 1989 Ionizing Radiation Effects in MOS Devices and Circuits New York John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 0 471 84893 X Messenger George C Ash Milton S 1992 The Effects of Radiation on Electronic Systems Second ed New York Van Nostrand Reinhold ISBN 0 442 23952 1 Oldham Timothy R 2000 Ionizing Radiation Effects in MOS Oxides International Series on Advances in Solid State Electronics and Technology World Scientific doi 10 1142 3655 ISBN 978 981 02 3326 6 Platteter Dale G 2006 Archive of Radiation Effects Short Course Notebooks 1980 2006 IEEE ISBN 1 4244 0304 9 Schrimpf Ronald D Fleetwood Daniel M July 2004 Radiation Effects and Soft Errors in Integrated Circuits and Electronic Devices Selected Topics in Electronics and Systems Vol 34 World Scientific doi 10 1142 5607 ISBN 978 981 238 940 4 Schroder Dieter K 1990 Semiconductor Material and Device Characterization New York John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 0 471 51104 8 Schulman James Herbert Compton Walter Dale 1962 Color Centers in Solids International Series of Monographs on Solid State Physics Vol 2 Pergamon Press Holmes Siedle Andrew van Lint Victor A J 2000 Radiation Effects in Electronic Materials and Devices In Meyers Robert A ed Encyclopedia of Physical Science and Technology Vol 13 Third ed New York Academic Press ISBN 0 12 227423 7 van Lint Victor A J Flanagan Terry M Leadon Roland Eugene Naber James Allen Rogers Vern C 1980 Mechanisms of Radiation Effects in Electronic Materials Vol 1 New York John Wiley amp Sons p 13073 Bibcode 1980STIA 8113073V ISBN 0 471 04106 8 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Watkins George D 1986 The Lattice Vacancy in Silicon In Pantelides Sokrates T ed Deep Centers in Semiconductors A State of the Art Approach Second ed New York Gordon and Breach ISBN 2 88124 109 3 Watts Stephen J 1997 Overview of radiation damage in silicon detectors Models and defect engineering Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A 386 1 149 155 Bibcode 1997NIMPA 386 149W doi 10 1016 S0168 9002 96 01110 2 Ziegler James F Biersack Jochen P Littmark Uffe 1985 The Stopping and Range of Ions in Solids Vol 1 New York Pergamon Press ISBN 0 08 021603 X External links editFederal Standard 1037C link Archived 2011 03 01 at the Wayback Machine I ntegrated Approach with COTS Creates Rad Tolerant SBC for Space By Chad Thibodeau Maxwell Technologies COTS Journal Dec 2003 Sandia Labs to develop radiation hardened Pentium for space and defense needs Sandia press release 8 Dec 1998 also includes a general backgrounder section on Sandia s manufacturing processes for radiation hardening of microelectronics Radiation effects on quartz crystals Vanderbilt University Institute for Space and Defense Electronics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Radiation hardening amp oldid 1220150442, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.