Publication | Closed Access
Heavy ion and proton-induced single event multiple upset
103
Citations
24
References
1997
Year
EngineeringNuclear PhysicsLogic StatesComputer ArchitectureHeavy IonMulti-channel Memory ArchitectureAdjacent Memory CellsHeavy Ion PhysicHeavy-ion PhysicsIon EmissionHigh-energy Nuclear ReactionPhysicsComputer EngineeringAtomic PhysicsMicroelectronicsMemory ArchitectureHeavy Ion EventsNatural SciencesParticle PhysicsApplied PhysicsSemiconductor Memory
Individual ionizing heavy ion events are shown to cause two or more adjacent memory cells to change logic states in a high density CMOS SRAM. A majority of the upsets produced by normally incident heavy ions are due to single-particle events that causes a single cell to upset. However, for grazing angles a majority of the upsets produced by heavy-ion irradiation are due to single-particle events that cause two or more cells to change logic states. Experimental evidence of a single proton-induced spallation reaction that causes two adjacent memory cells to change logic states is presented. Results from a dual volume Monte-Carlo simulation code for proton-induced single-event multiple upsets are within a factor of three of experimental data for protons at normal incidence and 70 degrees.
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