Title :
Angular Dependency of Neutron-Induced Multiple Cell Upsets in 65-nm 10T Subthreshold SRAM
Author :
Harada, Ryo ; Abe, Shin-Ichiro ; Fuketa, Hiroshi ; Uemura, Taiki ; Hashimoto, Masanori ; Watanabe, Yukinobu
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Inf. Syst. Eng., Osaka Univ., Suita, Japan
Abstract :
This paper reports neutron-induced MCU (Multiple Cell Upset) measured in 0.4-V 65-nm 10T SRAM at two incident angles of 0 ° and 60 °. The measurement results show that the ratio of the number of measured MCUs at the angles of 60° to that at 0° is 1.13 in 0.4-V operation, while the ratio of neutrons radiated to the test chip was 50% at 60° . The spatial MCU patterns measured at 60° indicate that forward emission of secondary ions plays an important role to cause the angular dependency in 0.4-V operation. Furthermore, a Monte-Carlo simulation using PHITS (Particle and Heavy Ion Transport code System) was performed to confirm the measured angular dependency of neutron-induced MCUs. The simulation results show that the ratio of the number of MCUs at the angles of 60° to that at 0° is 1.20 and the same tendency of MCU patterns is observed. The measured angular dependency of neutron-induced MCUs is mostly reproduced by the simulated generation and transport of secondary ions.
Keywords :
Monte Carlo methods; SRAM chips; integrated circuit measurement; integrated circuit testing; radiation hardening (electronics); MCU patterns; Monte-Carlo simulation; PHITS code; SRAM subthreshold; angular dependency; magnetic flux density 10 T; measurement results; neutron radiation; neutron-induced multiple cell upsets; ratio number; secondary ion forward emission; secondary ion transport; simulated secondary ion generation; size 65 nm; CMOS technology; Monte Carlo methods; Simulation; Single event upset; Subthreshold current; Angular dependency; PHITS (particle and heavy ion transport code system); multiple cell upset; neutron-induced soft error; subthreshold circuit;
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNS.2012.2224373