DocumentCode :
871684
Title :
Predicting CMOS Inverter Response in Nuclear and Space Environments
Author :
Winokur, P.S. ; Kerris, K.G. ; Harper, L.
Author_Institution :
U. S. Army Research and Development Command Harry Diamond Laboratories Adelphi, Maryland 20783
Volume :
30
Issue :
6
fYear :
1983
Firstpage :
4326
Lastpage :
4332
Abstract :
Linear system theory techniques were used to predict threshold-voltage shifts for 4007 inverters at dose rates of 270, 49.7, and 0.19 rad(Si)/s, from a transient annealing curve determined following a 5-rad(Si)/s 60Co irradiation. These predictions were compared with threshold-voltage shifts obtained following 60Co irradiations actually performed at these dose rates, and the agreement is excellent. We observed a wide range of annealing rates for commercial and military 4007 inverters--some Al-gate inverters exhibited very little annealing following irradiation, while an Si-gate inverter completely annealed back to its preirradiation threshold voltage in ~5 × 105 s. The radiation responses of 4007´s from a specific manufacturer with different packaging (i.e., plastic or ceramic) and/or electrical characterization (i.e., high-reliability or JAN) were found to vary significantly. Maintaining bias following irradiation was determined to be important in characterizing the anneal of both Al-and Si-gate inverters. Finally, dose-enhancement effects on the threshold-voltage shift were observed for 60Co inpool irradiations where the source and sample were separated by 20 in. of water.
Keywords :
Annealing; Ceramics; Circuit testing; Inverters; Laboratories; Linear systems; Manufacturing; Performance evaluation; Plastics; Research and development;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9499
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TNS.1983.4333132
Filename :
4333132
Link To Document :
بازگشت