(engineering) Improving the ability of a device or piece of equipment to withstand nuclear or other radiation; applies chiefly to dielectric and semiconductor materials.
| Sci-Tech Dictionary: radiation hardening |
(engineering) Improving the ability of a device or piece of equipment to withstand nuclear or other radiation; applies chiefly to dielectric and semiconductor materials.
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The protection of semiconductor electronic devices and electronic systems from the effects of high-energy radiation. Applications for such devices are in three major areas: (1) satellites, which are exposed to natural space radiation from the Van Allen belts, solar flares, and cosmic rays; (2) electronics, especially sensor and control electronics for commercial nuclear power-generating plants; and (3) equipment designed to survive the radiation from nuclear explosions.
Although most radiation effects have been explained and are well understood, much remains to be done. Among the better-understood phenomena are displacement damage from neutrons and photocurrent transients produced by ionizing-radia-tion pulses. Basic electromagnetic-pulse interactions are also well understood, although their effects on complex electronic systems are extremely difficult to predict. See also Electromagnetic pulse (EMP).
The quasipermanent effects of exposure to ionizing radiation are least understood, and understanding the response of semiconductor devices to this radiation is probably the single most important remaining radiation-hardening problem. Hardening of metal-oxide-semiconductor (MOS) devices has been accomplished by lower-temperature processing, which probably reduces physical or crystalline defects, and by developing extremely clean processes, which probably reduce chemical defects. The most important electrical manifestations of ionizing dose damage in MOS devices are an increase in leakage current; a shift in threshold voltage; and a decrease in speed, transconductance, and channel conductance. See also Crystal.
Dose-rate effects are well understood. The generation of electron-hole pairs in semiconductors is proportional to the dose. Carriers generated in or near a pn junction result in a transient photocurrent proportional to dose rate and the effective volume of the junction. High dose rates can damage semiconductor devices through logic upset, latch-up, and burnout. See also Photovoltaic effect.
Displacement damage effects are caused by neutrons, protons, electrons, and other high-energy particles. The production of lattice defects is proportional to the nonionizing energy absorbed by the lattice. The dominant effect in bipolar silicon devices is a reduction in common-emitter current gain.
Single-event upsets are caused at a very low rate in logic and memory circuits by cosmic rays. Rates are low enough (less than 10−3 upset per bit per day) that error-detection-and-correction (EDAC) software can be effectively used. Single-event phenomena have led to the development of fault-tolerant architectures to mitigate the effects of random digital upsets, and to the design modification of integrated circuits to prevent an upset even when the active volume is struck by a cosmic ray. See also Fault-tolerant systems.
Hardening of electronic systems is accomplished by a combination of selecting hardened components, designing circuits more tolerant to radiation-induced degradations, and shielding. Shielding is effective against x-rays and electrons, which have short ranges in materials, and relatively ineffective against gamma radiation, neutrons, and cosmic rays, which have long ranges in materials. See also Integrated circuits; Radiation damage to materials; Radiation shielding; Semiconductor.
| Wikipedia: Radiation hardening |
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This article is missing citations or needs footnotes. Please help add inline citations to guard against copyright violations and factual inaccuracies. (May 2009) |
Radiation hardening is a method of designing and testing electronic components and systems to make them resistant to damage or malfunctions caused by high-energy subatomic particles and electromagnetic radiation[1], such as would be encountered in outer space, high-altitude flight, around nuclear reactors, or during warfare.
Most radiation-hardened chips are based on their commercial equivalents, with some manufacturing and design variations that reduce the susceptibility to interference from electromagnetic radiation. Due to the extensive development and testing required to produce a radiation-tolerant design of a microelectronic chip, radiation-hardened chips tend to lag behind the cutting-edge of developments.
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Environments with high levels of ionizing radiation create special design challenges. A single charged particle can knock thousands of electrons loose, causing electronic noise and signal spikes. In the case of digital circuits, this can cause results which are inaccurate or unintelligible. This is a particularly serious problem in the design of artificial satellites, spacecraft, military aircraft, nuclear power stations, and nuclear weapons. In order to ensure the proper operation of such systems, manufacturers of integrated circuits and sensors intended for the (military) aerospace markets employ various methods of radiation hardening. The resulting systems are said to be rad(iation)-hardened, rad-hard, or (within context) hardened.
Typical sources of exposure of electronics to ionizing radiation are solar wind and the Van Allen radiation belts for satellites, nuclear reactors in power plants for sensors and control circuits, residual radiation from isotopes in chip packaging materials, cosmic radiation for both high-altitude airplanes and satellites, and nuclear explosions for potentially all military and civilian electronics.
Two fundamental damage mechanisms take place:
The effects can vary wildly depending on all the parameters - the type of radiation, total dose and the radiation flux, combination of types of radiation, and even the kind of the device load (operating frequency, operating voltage, actual state of the transistor during the instant it is struck by the particle), which makes thorough testing difficult, time consuming, and requiring a lot of test samples.
The "end-user" effects can be characterized in several groups:
Single-event effects (SEE), mostly affecting only digital devices, were not studied extensively until relatively recently. When a high-energy particle travels through a semiconductor, it leaves an ionized track behind. This ionization may cause a highly localized effect similar to the transient dose one - a benign glitch in output, a less benign bit flip in memory or a register, or, especially in high-power transistors, a destructive latchup and burnout. Single event effects have importance for electronics in satellites, aircraft, and other both civilian and military aerospace applications. Sometimes in circuits not involving latches it is helpful to introduce RC time constant circuits, slowing down the circuit's reaction time beyond the duration of an SEE.
In telecommunication, the term nuclear hardness has the following meanings:
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