Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
547608 Microelectronics Reliability 2007 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Since the 80s it is known that Terrestrial Cosmic Rays, mainly reported as Atmospheric Neutrons, can penetrate the natural shielding of buildings, equipments and circuit package and induce Soft Errors in integrated circuits and breakdown of power devices. The high-energy neutron fluxes of interest range between 10 particles/cm2/h at sea level and some 103 particles/cm2/h at typical airplanes flight altitude of 30,000 feet, with modulation due to Solar Flares. In the 90s the phenomenon has pervaded as a consequence of the roadmap of electronic devices, especially downscaling of design rules, increase of signal bandwidth and increase of the size of DRAM and SRAM memory, standalone or embedded on processors and system-on-chips. Failure-in-time and soft error rate became unacceptable. Test Standards and design solutions have been proposed to maintain reliability of commercial products and improve those used in special such as avionic computers. The paper describes the Atmospheric Neutron flux, the effects in the main classes of devices and specific cases such as neutron-induced single event upset observed in CMOS vs. CMOS/SOI and some mitigation issues. A model called CCPM (critical cross-point model) is proposed to provide critical graphs of technology node sensitivity along the scaling trend of CMOS.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Hardware and Architecture
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