High LET Single Event Upset Cross Sections For Bulk and SOI CMOS SRAMs F.D. McDaniel,a,b,* B.L. Doyle,a G. Vizkelethy,a P.E. Dodd,a and P. Rossi a,c.# a Ion Beam Materials Research Laboratory, Sandia National Laboratories, PO Box 5800, MS-1056, Albuquerque, NM 87185-1056 b Ion Beam Modification and Analysis Laboratory, Dept. of Physics, PO Box 311427, University of North Texas, Denton, TX 76203-1427 c University of Padova and INFN, via Marzolo 8, 35131 Padova, Italy Abstract. Electronics in spacecraft and satellites are exposed to high-energy cosmic radiation. In addition, terrestrial radiation can also affect earth-based electronics. To study the effects of radiation upon integrated circuits and to insure the reliability of electronic devices, cosmic and terrestrial radiations are simulated with ion beams from particle accelerators. A new, higher Linear Energy Transfer (LET) acceleration system for heavy ions has been developed at Sandia National Laboratories. Heavy ions from a 6.5 MV EN tandem Van de Graaff accelerator at 0.25 MeV/amu are injected into a two-stage Radio Frequency Quadrupole (RFQ) linac, which accelerates the ions to 1.9 MeV/amu. These ions together with those from the Brookhaven National Laboratory MP Tandem have been used to measure single event upset (SEU) cross sections as a function of LET for both bulk and Silicon on Insulator (SOI) Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor, Static Random Access Memories. The magnitudes of these cross sections indicate that the upsets in both the SOI and bulk parts are caused by OFFdrain strikes. * # F.D. McDaniel was at Sandia National Laboratories on a faculty sabbatical from the University of North Texas. P. Rossi is at Sandia National Laboratories on a faculty sabbatical leave from the University of Padua and INFN, Italy. INTRODUCTION SEU CROSS SECTIONS High-energy, cosmic radiation can adversely affect electronics in satellites and spacecraft. In addition to secondaries, such as neutrons from cosmic radiation, which penetrate the earth’s atmosphere, earth-based electronics can also be affected by terrestrial radiation sources. A strong effort is being made to design and produce electronics circuits, which have been radiation-hardened. To gauge the success or failure of these hardening efforts, particle accelerators are commonly used to simulate the effects of high-energy radiation on integrated circuits (ICs) by bombarding the ICs with highenergy, heavy-ions. An ultra-high deposition of charge or linear energy transfer (LET) [1] is necessary to produce electronic malfunctions or single event upsets (SEU) to test the radiationhardened circuits. The ions are allowed to impinge on an IC and the number of upsets per incident ion is determined. For example, for memory chips, a pattern is written into the memory and then the chips are irradiated with a known fluence of ions. After irradiation, the memory is read out to determine the number of errors. The SEU cross section is determined by simply taking the ratio of the number of detected errors or “soft upsets” to the measured fluence of the beam. By varying the LET of the incident ion, the SEU cross sections can be determined as a function of the ionizing power or LET of the ion. For the present work, the entire memory device was irradiated using ≥ 1 cm diameter broad beams of a number of different LET ions. CP680, Application of Accelerators in Research and Industry: 17th Int'l. Conference, edited by J. L. Duggan and I. L. Morgan © 2003 American Institute of Physics 0-7354-0149-7/03/$20.00 355 ACCELERATORS LET at Surface (MeV/mg/cm2) MeV-amu/Q2 Sandia National Laboratories (SNLAlbuquerque, NM) Ion Beam Materials Research Laboratory (IBMRL) is using Radiation Effects Microscopy (REM) [2] as well as broad beams of ions to study radiation-hardened ICs. High LET, heavy ions are produced by a Radio Frequency Quadrupole Linear Accelerator (RFQ linac) coupled to a 6.5 MV model EN tandem Van de Graaff accelerator. The RFQ linac is designed to accelerate a variety of ions with a mass-to-charge ratio of m/q ≤ 8. Heavy-ions from the tandem at an energy/mass of 0.25 MeV/amu are injected into a two-stage RFQ linac, which boosts the ion energy/mass to 1.9 MeV/amu. Heavy ions at this velocity are very near the “Bragg Peak” of the electronic stopping power, and therefore the charge deposition density is almost maximized. After magnetic momentum/charge analysis, the 0.25 MeV/amu ions from the 6.5 MV EN tandem accelerator are passed through a 5-10 µg/cm2 carbon stripping foil to produce higher charge states and then injected into the RFQ linac. The RFQ linac operates in a pulsed mode usually at 100 Hz repetition rate with a pulse length of 50 µs for a duty cycle factor of 0.005. Since only about 20% of the ions are in the correct phase to be accelerated by the RFQ linac, of all the ions exiting the stripper foil, only about 1 ion in a 1000 from the tandem is accelerated. Since after electron stripping, only one charge state of the ion is the correct m/q to be accelerated, this fraction is further reduced by a factor of ~10 to about 1 ion in 10,000. Fortunately, only a few hundred to a few thousand ions are needed for SEU cross-section measurements. See McDaniel et al. [3] in these proceedings for more information about the SNL RFQ linac. The MP tandem at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) operates with a terminal voltage near 15 MV, and has a dedicated beam line for SEU cross-section measurements. A comparison of the single event IC testing capabilities of these two accelerator systems is given in Fig. 1. 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 0-10 20-40 BNL MP Tandem 40-80 80-160 SNL Tandem + RFQ 10 100 1000 Range (microns) FIGURE 1. Comparison of the LET and ion range for particles from H to Au accelerated by the SNL EN tandem-RFQ system and the BNL MP tandem. The two accelerators have similar LET ranges, but the BNL tandem provides ions that have a higher penetration. static random access memory (SRAM) devices. The TA788 is a 16k SRAM, where half of the memory has been radiation hardened by feedback resistors. The cross-sectional view of one inverter of the TA788 memory cell is shown in Figure 2a. Vss n+ source p+ drain n+ drain p-well oxide p+ source Vdd n-well p-epi p+ substrate FIGURE 2a. Cross-section view of an inverter of a memory cell of the TA788 (bulk technology). In the transistor with the p-channel and n-well, the n-well/p-epi junction is reversed biased. If an ion strikes in the n-well, high charge collection will result. If an ion strikes in the pepi or in the source of the n-channel transistor, very low charge collection will result. The charge collection from ion strikes in the drain depends upon the state of the transistor. If the DEVICES TESTED SEU measurements were made on a Sandia TA788 Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor (CMOS6r bulk technology) and Silicon-on-Insulator (SOI) (CMOS7 technology) 356 transistor is off because the transistor is reverse biased, the charge collection is high. If the transistor is on and only the built-in bias is present, the charge collection will be low in comparison. The SOI devices in the experiment were 64k SRAMs, the cross sectional view is shown in Figure 2b. In the past, SOI devices were considered less sensitive to radiation effects than bulk devices. It was assumed that in contrast to bulk devices, the insulating buried oxide (BOX) layer would not allow the charge generated in the substrate to be collected by the circuit. The only charge distributed to the individual SRAM memory cells would be the charge deposited in the FET gates located in the top silicon layer. Because this top layer for SOI is usually about 250 nm thick and the ion range or charge collection length is ~10 µm, the collected charge for SOI devices is reduced by a factor of ~40 when compared to bulk devices. Therefore, SOI devices should have much-less SEU sensitivity than bulk devices. n+ source Vss p+ drain Sandia National Laboratories ranged from 32 to 103 MeV/mg/cm2. The higher LETs were obtained by rotating the samples. -2 10 -3 SEU cross section [cm2] 10 10 -6 10 -7 TANDEM -8 10 0 TANDEM+RFQ 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 2 LET[MeV/mg/cm] FIGURE 3a. SEU cross-sections of the bulk CMOS TA788 SRAM measured at BNL and SNL. Vdd oxide BNLtotal chip BNLradhard SNLtotal chip(Cu) SNLtotal chip(I) SNLradhard(Cu) SNLradhard(I) SNLradhard(Au) -5 10 p+ source n+ drain -4 10 BOX p- substrate FIGURE 2b. Cross-section view of an inverter of an SOI memory cell showing the buried oxide (BOX). SEU CROSS SECTION MEASUREMENTS Recent SEU cross-section measurements in TA788 ICs were made using BNL MP tandem accelerator and the SNL EN tandem accelerator plus the RFQ linac. Both sets of measurements were broad beam measurements (≥ 1 cm in diameter) and are shown in Figure 3a. At Sandia, we utilized 120 MeV 63Cu, 241 MeV 127 I, and 374 MeV 197Au ions. The ion flux was measured with a Hamamatsu PIN diode with a sensitive area of 3.6 x 3.6 mm2. By moving the diode perpendicular to the ion beam, we determined the ion flux was 3.5 x 103 ions/cm2/s and was uniformly spread over an area of ~13 x 25 mm2 for the iodine beam. The fluxes for the Cu and Au ions were also a few thousand ions/cm2/s. The LET of these ion beams at 357 The BNL results and the SNL results are in good agreement with the exception of the Cu measurements on the radiation hardened part of the TA788 IC. It appears that the TA788 IC measured at SNL had a somewhat higher LET threshold of ~46 MeV/mg/cm2 compared with ~38 MeV/mg/cm2 measured at BNL. However, the two sets of measurements were made on different TA788 ICs. The SEU cross-sections of an SOI SRAM with a 200 nm BOX on a p-type substrate were measured at BNL [4]. This measurement showed a surprisingly large SEU cross section. Based on the assumed much smaller charge collection, the expected saturation cross section (the total area of the gates) was about 0.64 µm2/bit, while the measured cross section was about 8 µm2/bit which is much closer to the combined areas of the drains and gates. This indicated that charge collection (i.e. induction) did occur through the BOX in contrast to past assumptions. Charge collection experiments on thermal capacitors proved that there is significant charge induced by displacement currents through the oxide [5, 6]. From these experiments, it was determined that a thicker BOX or change in the substrate from the usual p-type to n-type could reduce, even completely eliminate the charge collection into the SRAM circuit from the prototype devices quickly and make selected SEU cross section measurements on-site. SOI memory devices with different designs were tested with the new high LET system and it was found that the saturation SEU cross section is closer to the combined drain and gate areas than to the gate area alone. This indicates that charge deposited in the substrate can be collected by the SRAM circuit through induction and displacement currents. This was confirmed by model experiments on thermal capacitors. The mitigation techniques, which included thicker oxides and n-type substrates derived from the model experiments, did not seem to significantly improve the radiation hardness of the devices. In the future, a combination of broad-beam and nuclear microprobe experiments is expected to solve this technologically important problem and help develop techniques that could improve the radiation hardness of SOI devices. substrate. The 64k SRAMs, made on n-type substrates with 100 nm and 400 nm BOX, were tested at the SNL SEU facility to see if the above approaches work. A beam of 241 MeV 127I was used with a LET of 55 MeV/mg/cm2. The results are shown in Figure 3b together with the earlier BNL measurements on 200 nm BOX SRAM on p-type substrates. SEU cross section [cm2] 0.01 1E-3 1E-4 BNL, 200 nmBOX, p type SNL, 100 nmBOX, n-type SNL, 400 nmBOX, n-type 1E-5 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 1E-6 0 20 40 60 80 100 Sandia is a multiprogram laboratory operated by Sandia Corporation, a Lockheed Martin Company, for the United States Department of Energy under Contract DE-AC04-94AL85000. Work at UNT supported in part by the National Science Foundation, the Office of Naval Research, Texas Advanced Technology Program, and the Robert A. Welch Foundation. 120 2 LET [MeV-cm /mg] FIGURE 3b. SEU cross-sections of 64k SOI SRAMs. The 200 nm BOX p-type substrate were measured at BNL. The 100 nm and 400 nm BOX on n-type substrates were measured at SNL. Although the SEU cross sections are found to be somewhat smaller for these new devices, it was not reduced significantly. The cross sections are still closer to the combined gate and drain areas than to the gate area itself. This measurement therefore presents a serious problem that IC designers must solve before SOI-based SRAMs can be used with confidence in single event effect environments. REFERENCES 1. LET is Linear Energy Transfer or energy per path length in MeV/mg/cm2. 2. Doyle, B.L., Vizkelethy, G., Horn, K.M., Walsh, D.S., and Dodd, P.E., AIP Conference Proceedings 576, New York, 2001, pp. 516-521. 3. McDaniel, F.D., Doyle, B.L., Rossi, P., Buller, D.L., Hamm, R.W., and Schone, H., “The Tandem-RFQ Linac Booster at Sandia National Laboratories,” this proceedings. 4. Dodd, P.E., Shaneyfelt, M.R., Horn, K.M., Walsh, D.S., Hash, G.L., Hill, T.A., Draper, B.L., Schwank, J.R., Sexton, F.W., and Winokur, P.S., IEEE Trans. Nucl. Sci. 48, 1893 (2001). 5. Schwank, J.R., Dodd, P.E., Shaneyfelt, M.R., Vizkelethy, G., Draper, B.L., Hill, T.A., Walsh, D.S., Hash, G.L., Doyle, B.L., and McDaniel, F.D., submitted to IEEE Trans. Nucl. Sci. 6. Vizkelethy, G., Dodd, P.E., Schwank, J.R., Shaneyfelt, M.R., Walsh, D.S., McDaniel, F.D., and Doyle, B.L., Proc. of the 8th International Conference on Nuclear Microprobe Technology and Applications, Takasaki, Japan, September 813, 2002, to be published in Nucl. Instr. Meth. B. CONCLUSIONS A new broad-beam SEU cross section measurement capability has been developed at SNL based on the combination of an EN tandem Van de Graaff and RFQ accelerators. The maximum LET in Si, that this facility can provide, is ~100 MeV/mg/cm2 (374 MeV gold beam), which is almost the highest LET found in nature. The SEU cross sections of CMOS6r devices measured at SNL agreed very well with the cross sections measured at BNL. This new facility will allow SNL designers to test their 358
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