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MURI Device-level Radiation Effects Modeling Hugh Barnaby, Jie Chen, Ivan Sanchez Department of Electrical Engineering Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering Arizona State University Topics • Target of Research • Radiation Effect Modeling: A TCADbased approach • Example: Drain-source leakage in deepsubmicron bulk CMOS Goals • Model the effects of TID and DD defects on advanced device technologies • Identify the continuing and emerging radiation threats to these technologies • Model the defects: implement physical models, dynamics of buildup • Radiation effects testing (Co60, neutrons, low temperature testing) Radiation Concerns • Total ionizing dose • Displacement damage • Single event damage and micro-dose Technologies and Techniques • Ultra Thin Oxides • Shallow Trench Isolation • Buried Oxides • Implants • Heterojunctions • Gate technologies Device Categories • Ultra Small Bulk CMOS • Silicon on Insulator (dual gate operation) • Strained Silicon CMOS • SiGe HBTs ASU has a strong relationship with FreeScale semiconductor. Effects • Oxide Damage and Reliability • • • • Defect buildup Leakage Breakdown Annealing and other temperature dependent processes • Semiconductor Effects • • • • Electrostatics Carrier recombination and removal Mobility effects Annealing and other temperature dependent processes Testing • Co60 g-sources • ASU (100 rd/s, 1 rd/s, ~10mrd/s) • UA (100 rd/s, 10 md/s) • Neutron Sources (UA – Triga and Rabbit Reactors) • Low temperature Co60 irradiations (down to 70k) TCAD Modeling and Simulation TCAD Flow Process and Layout Description Design Bias Conditions Process Sim. Device Sim. To EDA Circuit Sim. OPTIMIZE STRUCTURE GEOMETRY OPTIMIZE ELECTRICAL PERFORMANCE PROCESS DEVICE CIRCUIT Ileak NET DOPING 2D cross section of LOCOS parasitic nMOSFET POTENTIAL 2D potential contours in parasitic nMOSFET Vd Leakage current vs. drain voltage SRAM Schematic including parasitic nMOSFET element Radiation Effects Modeling Displace. Damage Total Dose heating, defect formation, tunneling. Strain effects, energy to defect conv., doping profiles carrier transport in dielectric, defect formation and approximations Defect precursors Process and Layout Description Bias Conditions Process Device OPTIMIZE GEOMETRY AND PRECURSORS Example: D-S Leakage Due to aggressive scaling into the deep sub-micron, the threat of significant threshold voltage shifts caused by charge buildup in the gate oxide has been reduced. Instead threats have shifted elsewhere, such as drain-tosource leakage caused by charge buildup in the isolation oxide (shallow trench – STI) STI shallow trench isolation oxide N+ Source Polysilicon gate N+ drain Leakage Leakage + ++ + + + ++ + + TID effects on off-state leakage 1E-03 VG = 1.8 V TSMC 0.18 m NMOS 72 rad/s Minimum Geometry 1E-05 3.2 nm/STI • Increase in off-state leakage (ID @ Vgs = 0V) increases to 100nA after 400 krad of exposure. 50K 1E-07 100K 150K 1.E-06 1E-09 1E-11 1E-13 • Problem in SRAM arrays (power, overheating, and failure) 200K 1.E-07 IDoff (A) Drain Current (A) 0 250K 1.E-08 1.E-09 300K 1.E-10 400k 1.E-11 500k 1.E-12 PA 250 300 350 400 Dose (krad(Si)) 1E-15 -0.5 0 0.5 1 Gate Voltage (V) After Lacoe NSREC SC 2003 1.5 2 TI-MSC1211 A/D Converter 5V Supply • 24-bit Delta-Sigma ADC V5V supply Supply Isupply AVDD • Intel 8051 microcontroller DVDD • Timers Flash memory • Universal asynchronous receiver and transmitter REFIN AIN+ AIN- A/D Processor • Internal reference generator RAM • RAM, ROM, and flash memory GND UART Comp. Terminal Temperature monitor, RTD (resistant temperature device), mounted on package measure specifications Offset Calibration 1 failure point change in OCR (ppm) 0.5 0 post_rad control -0.5 • Bit-error output for differential input • High frequency data represents noise induced offsets -1 • Mean value determined by device mismatch, temp variation, etc. -1.5 -2 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 Dose (krads(Si)) Other specs include: full scale, and ENOB Supply Current and Temperature Digital Supply Current vs. DOSE 300 TID leads to increase in operating temperature of device. 200 150 Id 100 50 Package Temperature vs. DOSE 0 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 80 dose (krads (Si)) 70 60 Temp (C) Current (mA) 250 50 40 Temp 30 20 10 0 0 10 20 dose (krads (Si)) Field oxide leakage path 30 Photoemission Analysis Increased power dissipation and die temperature caused by high static current density in pre-charge devices of SRAM array. Vsupply Field oxide leakage path Mechanism Increased current density reveals impact of radiation-induced leakage mechanism: the parasitic nMOSFET. VDD Precharge_n WD0 bit cell bit cell bit cell bit cell WD1 bit cell bit cell bit cell bit cell WD127 bit cell bit cell bit cell bit cell B0 B0_n B1 Col(1:0) B1_n B2 B2_n B3 B3_n Column select b bn W_Rn DIN DIN_n Sense_n sense amp Dout(0) Dout(1) Dout(2) Dout(7) Parasitic nMOSFET L W W STI “as drawn” nMOSFET parasitic nMOSFET VT PRE-RAD Due to its greater oxide thickness, the parasitic nMOSFET has a much higher VT and lower drive current compared to “as drawn” device. POST-RAD Due to its greater oxide thickness, oxide-charge buildup in the parasitic nMOSFET is much greater, causing large shifts in VT drive current. “as drawn” nFET parasitic nFET VT (1013 ) VT (1012 ) VT (1011 ) VT (0) Drive current Drive current Increasing TID Parasitic nMOSFET Parameters V CC_CIRCLE “As Drawn” nFET “As Drawn” V CC_CIRCLE Parasitic Parasitic nFET tox Weff Vt 0 Circuit modeling of leakage requires accurate extraction of key parasitic parameters: threshold voltage, effective width, and oxide thickness 2D Modeling Approach Standard 2-edge device 2D Cross-section along cutline gate Not + + Drain Cutline Source Not +++ Gate Si + + STI + + + + uniform oxide charge (Not) Modeling on IBM 0.13um 8RF CMOS 2D Modeling Results Not = 5x1012 cm2 (uniform) Vgs = 0.2V +++ * + + + + electron + inversion + layer Combination of Not, gate bias, and device properties creates electron inversion layer at the STI edge Definition of Threshold Voltage cutline Silicon 0.6 0.4 Threshold voltage is the gate voltage at which the inversion potential () equals the bulk potential. Note: dependent on Not density and cutline depth. energy [eV] 0.2 bulk potential (B) 0 -0.2 surface potential Inversion potential Ei(0)= = s Ef –EfEi(0) -0.4 -0.6 -0.8 NOT=5E12 C/cm^2 NOT=2E12 C/cm^2 NOT=7E12 C/cm^2 Ef [eV] STI Threshold voltage [V] Extracting Cox and tox 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 -2 VT of parasitic Cox Slope Cox Cross over indicates TID susceptibility VT of “as drawn” 1 3 5 7 Oxide Trapped Charge (1012 cm-2) qNot ΔVT 4.6 x 10 8 F/cm 2 t ox ox Cox 76 nm Effective width (Weff.) Parasitic nMOSFET width (Weff.) is dependent on oxide charge, gate bias, and other parameters. Not = 2x1012 cm2 Vgs = 0.2V W(2) Not = 5x1012 cm2 Vgs = 0.2V W(5) Not = 7x1012 cm2 Vgs = 0.2V W(7) Surface potential (Si/STI Oxide interface) [V] Effective width (Weff.) Weff is calculated at a fixed gate bias and charge density over a specified depth (Wo). s 0.7 0.6 0.5 Weff 0.4 B 0.3 0.1 0 -0.005 0.005 0.015 0.025 Width (STI-FET) [um] B Wo 0 42 nm Weff 0.2 1 0.035 0.045 Sdw Volumetric TID Simulations How to relate device response to dose, process, and bias conditions … Sheet Charge … use TCAD rad effects modeling to generate NOT as function of precursors, dose, dose rate, and electric field Trapped Charge vol. distribution + + + + + + New CMOS Processing Issues Retrograde Channel doping Non uniform doping profile used for modeling variation in channel doping. Strained silicon “Both [IBM and Intel] introduced strained silicon” in 90 nm. - Semiconductor Insights NS ~ 1018 (ITRS 2002) NB > 1019 (Brews TED 8-00) d = 25 nm (ITRS 2002) strained Si channel Impact of Retrograde Without retrograde - wide channel - hi leakage Examine leakage channel inside box With retrograde - thin channel - lo leakage Will D-S leakage be a problem for 90 nm?