Modeling the Effects of Total Ionizing Dose for Bipolar Commercial Off the Shelf Circuits
Description
Bipolar commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) circuits are increasingly used in spacemissions due to the low cost per part. In space environments these devices are exposed to
ionizing radiation that degrades their performance. Testing to evaluate the performance of
these devices is a costly and lengthy process. As such methods that can help predict a
COTS part’s performance help alleviate these downsides. A modeling software for
predicting total ionizing dose (TID), enhanced low dose rate sensitivity (ELDRS), and
hydrogen gas on bipolar parts is introduced and expanded upon. The model is then
developed in several key ways that expand it’s features and usability in this field. A
physics based methodology of simulating interface traps (NIT) to expand the previously
experimental only database is detailed. This new methodology is also compared to
experimental data and used to establish a link between hydrogen concentration in the
oxide and packaged hydrogen gas. Links are established between Technology Computer
Aided Design (TCAD), circuit simulation, and experimental data. These links are then
used to establish a better foundation for the model. New methodologies are added to the
modeling software so that it is possible to simulate transient based characteristics like
slew rate.
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2022
Agent
- Author (aut): Roark, Samuel
- Thesis advisor (ths): Barnaby, Hugh
- Committee member: Sanchez Esqueda, Ivan
- Committee member: Bakkaloglu, Bertan
- Publisher (pbl): Arizona State University