Space radiation has a detrimental effect on integrated circuitry in earth-orbiting
satellites and planetary mission spacecrafts. As the high-energy particles pass through
the semiconductor material used to create the transistors on the integrated circuit,
they break the atomic bonds and cause electron/hole pairs. Due to the variation in
the electron/hole mobility of the various materials used in the integrated circuit,
charge can become trapped in the insulating materials in and around the transistor.
This excess charge leads to a variety of failure mechanisms in the circuitry including
threshold shifting, leakage current latchup, and inadvertent switching of digital
states. Integrated circuits created using commercial fabrication processes cannot
withstand the radiation effects that exist in space. As a result, novel circuit design
techniques and materials are needed to produce the equivalent functionality of off-the-shelf
components while being radiation hardened to meet NASA’s requirements. In this project,
we will develop a set of radiation tolerant circuit blocks are to be used in a dedicated
computer system for application in software defined radio applications. This project
will lay the foundation for future radiation hardened research at MSU by building
the necessary design infrastructure at MSU including VLSI/CAD tools, a library of
basic logic gates designed to be radiation hard/tolerant, and a set of higher level
microprocessor blocks that can be incorporated into a dedicated microcomputer design
(ALU, Cache, Counters, Multipliers).
Contact Info
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Brock LaMeres Electrical and Computer Engineering Montana State University Bozeman, MT 59717 |
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