Matching Items (16)
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Description
Digital architectures for data encryption, processing, clock synthesis, data transfer, etc. are susceptible to radiation induced soft errors due to charge collection in complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) integrated circuits (ICs). Radiation hardening by design (RHBD) techniques such as double modular redundancy (DMR) and triple modular redundancy (TMR) are used

Digital architectures for data encryption, processing, clock synthesis, data transfer, etc. are susceptible to radiation induced soft errors due to charge collection in complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) integrated circuits (ICs). Radiation hardening by design (RHBD) techniques such as double modular redundancy (DMR) and triple modular redundancy (TMR) are used for error detection and correction respectively in such architectures. Multiple node charge collection (MNCC) causes domain crossing errors (DCE) which can render the redundancy ineffectual. This dissertation describes techniques to ensure DCE mitigation with statistical confidence for various designs. Both sequential and combinatorial logic are separated using these custom and computer aided design (CAD) methodologies.

Radiation vulnerability and design overhead are studied on VLSI sub-systems including an advanced encryption standard (AES) which is DCE mitigated using module level coarse separation on a 90-nm process with 99.999% DCE mitigation. A radiation hardened microprocessor (HERMES2) is implemented in both 90-nm and 55-nm technologies with an interleaved separation methodology with 99.99% DCE mitigation while achieving 4.9% increased cell density, 28.5 % reduced routing and 5.6% reduced power dissipation over the module fences implementation. A DMR register-file (RF) is implemented in 55 nm process and used in the HERMES2 microprocessor. The RF array custom design and the decoders APR designed are explored with a focus on design cycle time. Quality of results (QOR) is studied from power, performance, area and reliability (PPAR) perspective to ascertain the improvement over other design techniques.

A radiation hardened all-digital multiplying pulsed digital delay line (DDL) is designed for double data rate (DDR2/3) applications for data eye centering during high speed off-chip data transfer. The effect of noise, radiation particle strikes and statistical variation on the designed DDL are studied in detail. The design achieves the best in class 22.4 ps peak-to-peak jitter, 100-850 MHz range at 14 pJ/cycle energy consumption. Vulnerability of the non-hardened design is characterized and portions of the redundant DDL are separated in custom and auto-place and route (APR). Thus, a range of designs for mission critical applications are implemented using methodologies proposed in this work and their potential PPAR benefits explored in detail.
ContributorsRamamurthy, Chandarasekaran (Author) / Clark, Lawrence T (Thesis advisor) / Allee, David (Committee member) / Bakkaloglu, Bertan (Committee member) / Holbert, Keith E. (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017
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Description
Digital systems are increasingly pervading in the everyday lives of humans. The security of these systems is a concern due to the sensitive data stored in them. The physically unclonable function (PUF) implemented on hardware provides a way to protect these systems. Static random-access memories (SRAMs) are designed and used

Digital systems are increasingly pervading in the everyday lives of humans. The security of these systems is a concern due to the sensitive data stored in them. The physically unclonable function (PUF) implemented on hardware provides a way to protect these systems. Static random-access memories (SRAMs) are designed and used as a strong PUF to generate random numbers unique to the manufactured integrated circuit (IC).

Digital systems are important to the technological improvements in space exploration. Space exploration requires radiation hardened microprocessors which minimize the functional disruptions in the presence of radiation. The design highly efficient radiation-hardened microprocessor for enabling spacecraft (HERMES) is a radiation-hardened microprocessor with performance comparable to the commercially available designs. These designs are manufactured using a foundry complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) 55-nm triple-well process. This thesis presents the post silicon validation results of the HERMES and the PUF mode of SRAM across process corners.

Chapter 1 gives an overview of the blocks implemented on the test chip 25. It also talks about the pre-silicon functional verification methodology used for the test chip. Chapter 2 discusses about the post silicon testing setup of test chip 25 and the validation of the setup. Chapter 3 describes the architecture and the test bench of the HERMES along with its testing results. Chapter 4 discusses the test bench and the perl scripts used to test the SRAM along with its testing results. Chapter 5 gives a summary of the post-silicon validation results of the HERMES and the PUF mode of SRAM.
ContributorsMedapuram, Sai Bharadwaj (Author) / Clark, Lawrence T (Thesis advisor) / Allee, David R. (Committee member) / Brunhaver, John S (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017
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Description
Radiation hardening by design (RHBD) has become a necessary practice when creating circuits to operate within radiated environments. While employing RHBD techniques has tradeoffs between size, speed and power, novel designs help to minimize these penalties. Space radiation is the primary source of radiation errors in circuits and two types

Radiation hardening by design (RHBD) has become a necessary practice when creating circuits to operate within radiated environments. While employing RHBD techniques has tradeoffs between size, speed and power, novel designs help to minimize these penalties. Space radiation is the primary source of radiation errors in circuits and two types of single event effects, single event upsets (SEU), and single event transients (SET) are increasingly becoming a concern. While numerous methods currently exist to nullify SEUs and SETs, special consideration to the techniques of temporal hardening and interlocking are explored in this thesis. Temporal hardening mitigates both SETs and SEUs by spacing critical nodes through the use of delay elements, thus allowing collected charge to be removed. Interlocking creates redundant nodes to rectify charge collection on one single node. This thesis presents an innovative, temporally hardened D flip-flop (TFF). The TFF physical design is laid out in the 130 nm TSMC process in the form of an interleaved multi-bit cell and the circuitry necessary for the flip-flop to be hardened against SETs and SEUs is analyzed with simulations verifying these claims. Comparisons are made to an unhardened D flip-flop through speed, size, and power consumption depicting how the RHBD technique used increases all three over an unhardened flip-flop. Finally, the blocks from both the hardened and the unhardened flip-flops being placed in Synthesis and auto-place and route (APR) design flows are compared through size and speed to show the effects of using the high density multi-bit layout. Finally, the TFF presented in this thesis is compared to two other flip-flops, the majority voter temporal/DICE flip-flop (MTDFF) and the C-element temporal/DICE flip-flop (CTDFF). These circuits are built on the same 130 nm TSMC process as the TFF and then analyzed by the same methods through speed, size, and power consumption and compared to the TFF and unhardened flip-flops. Simulations are completed on the MTDFF and CTDFF to show their strengths against D node SETs and SEUs as well as their weakness against CLK node SETs. Results show that the TFF is faster and harder than both the MTDFF and CTDFF.
ContributorsMatush, Bradley (Author) / Clark, Lawrence T (Thesis advisor) / Allee, David (Committee member) / Bakkaloglu, Bertan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2010
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Description
Microelectronic circuits are prone to upsets in the natural and manmade radiation environments. As the scaling of these circuits continues, they have become more susceptible to these upsets. In highly scaled technologies even the terrestrial radiation environment is becoming increasing source of soft errors in integrated circuits. Simultaneously the means

Microelectronic circuits are prone to upsets in the natural and manmade radiation environments. As the scaling of these circuits continues, they have become more susceptible to these upsets. In highly scaled technologies even the terrestrial radiation environment is becoming increasing source of soft errors in integrated circuits. Simultaneously the means of protecting circuits via the process technology have become more and more limited. As a result, design techniques to mitigate the upsets are becoming a requirement in an ever-growing list of applications. This work begins with an overview of radiation effects in integrated circuits. The phenomenology of upsets is discussed along with their basic mechanisms. How these effects are quantified in microelectronic circuits is then presented along with a summary of simulation methods. This is followed with a survey of the state of the field for radiation hardening by design techniques and a selection of radiation hardened flip flop designs. Upsets within these sequential circuits like flip flops can lead to process failure or erroneous execution and thus much of the radiation hardening effort is focused on protecting them. This work applies a systematic approach to radiation hardening by design to a temporally hardened flip flop and implements it in a 14nm finFET process. Forty-nine delay circuits are analyzed and compared on multiple performance metrics before a down select for integration. The resultant flip flop circuit is shown to have a minimum critical charge 3x higher than the baseline library flip flop. Physical design of the flip flop is outlined and nine configurations consisting of three delay lengths and three levels if bit interleaving are accomplished. The circuits are integrated as shift registers in a radiation test chip and exposed to heavy ion testing. Results of heavy ion testing demonstrate a threshold LET increase of approximately 6 MeV∙cm2/mg with marginal increases in saturation cross section for the target LET range. A failure mode is detected while storing ones, that has both area and time dependence. Substrate charge collection is suggested as a cause and a new circuit design is presented to mitigate the error with minimal performance impact.
ContributorsYoungSciortino, Clifford Samuel (Author) / Clark, Lawrence T (Thesis advisor) / Guertin, Steven M (Committee member) / Marinella, Matthew J (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
An integrated methodology combining redundant clock tree synthesis and pulse clocked latches mitigates both single event upsets (SEU) and single event transients (SET) with reduced power consumption. This methodology helps to change the hardness of the design on the fly. This approach, with minimal additional overhead circuitry, has the ability

An integrated methodology combining redundant clock tree synthesis and pulse clocked latches mitigates both single event upsets (SEU) and single event transients (SET) with reduced power consumption. This methodology helps to change the hardness of the design on the fly. This approach, with minimal additional overhead circuitry, has the ability to work in three different modes of operation depending on the speed, hardness and power consumption required by design. This was designed on 90nm low-standby power (LSP) process and utilized commercial CAD tools for testing. Spatial separation of critical nodes in the physical design of this approach mitigates multi-node charge collection (MNCC) upsets. An advanced encryption system implemented with the proposed design, compared to a previous design with non-redundant clock trees and local delay generation. The proposed approach reduces energy per operation up to 18% over an improved version of the prior approach, with negligible area impact. It can save up to 2/3rd of the power consumption and reach maximum possible frequency, when used in non-redundant mode of operation.
ContributorsGujja, Aditya (Author) / Clark, Lawrence T (Thesis advisor) / Holbert, Keith E. (Committee member) / Allee, David (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
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Description
As photons, electrons, and neutrons traverse a medium, they impart their energy in ways that are analytically difficult to describe. Monte Carlo methods provide valuable insight into understanding this behavior, especially when the radiation source or environment is too complex to simplify. This research investigates simulating various radiation sources using

As photons, electrons, and neutrons traverse a medium, they impart their energy in ways that are analytically difficult to describe. Monte Carlo methods provide valuable insight into understanding this behavior, especially when the radiation source or environment is too complex to simplify. This research investigates simulating various radiation sources using the Monte Carlo N-Particle (MCNP) transport code, characterizing their impact on various materials, and comparing the simulation results to general theory and measurements.

A total of five sources were of interest: two photon sources of different incident particle energies (3.83 eV and 1.25 MeV), two electron sources also of different energies (30 keV and 100 keV), and a californium-252 (Cf-252) spontaneous fission neutron source. Lateral and vertical programmable metallization cells (PMCs) were developed by other researchers for exposure to these photon and electron sources, so simplified PMC models were implemented in MCNP to estimate the doses and fluences. Dose rates measured around the neutron source and the predicted maximum activity of activation foils exposed to the neutrons were determined using MCNP and compared to experimental results obtained from gamma-ray spectroscopy.

The analytical fluence calculations for the photon and electron cases agreed with MCNP results, and differences are due to MCNP considering particle movements that hand calculations do not. Doses for the photon cases agreed between the analytical and simulated results, while the electron cases differed by a factor of up to 4.8. Physical dose rate measurements taken from the neutron source agreed with MCNP within the 10% tolerance of the measurement device. The activity results had a percent error of up to 50%, which suggests a need to further evaluate the spectroscopy setup.
ContributorsBowler, Herbert (Author) / Holbert, Keith E. (Thesis advisor) / Barnaby, Hugh J (Committee member) / Clark, Lawrence T (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2014