Publication | Closed Access
Total dose effects in conventional bipolar transistors and linear integrated circuits
196
Citations
19
References
1994
Year
EngineeringRadiation EffectRadiation ExposureIntegrated CircuitsConventional Bipolar TransistorsRadiation ProtectionRadiation TestingDiscrete TransistorsRadiation OncologyTotal Dose EffectsDevice ModelingElectrical EngineeringRadiation-hard DesignBias Temperature InstabilitySingle Event EffectsRadiation TransportRadiation SafetyRadiation EffectsMicroelectronicsDosimetryBias ConditionsTotal Dose DamageMedicine
Total dose damage is investigated for discrete bipolar transistors and linear integrated circuits that are fabricated with older processing technologies, but are frequently used in space applications. The Kirk effect limits the current density of discrete transistors with high collector breakdown voltage, increasing their sensitivity to ionizing radiation because they must operate low injection levels. Bias conditions during irradiation had different effects on discrete and integrated circuit transistors: discrete devices were strongly dependent on bias conditions, whereas damage in the linear ICs was nearly the same with or without bias. There were also large differences in the response of these devices at low dose rates. None of the discrete transistors exhibited enhanced damage at low dose rates, whereas substantially more damage occurred in the linear devices under low dose rate conditions, particularly for parameters that rely directly on p-n-p transistors. The threshold for dose rate effects in p-n-p transistors was about 0.01 rad(Si)/s, which is approximately two orders of magnitude lower than the corresponding threshold for n-p-n transistors in integrated circuits.< <ETX xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">></ETX>
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