Abstract

This paper describes the total ionizing dose (TID) radiation hardening of buried oxide in separation by implantation of oxygen silicon on insulator (SOI) substrates. In this study, 0.5-μm partially depleted SOI complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor (CMOS) transistors and circuits were prepared using double-charge multiple-step ion implantation and annealing, and the changes in the drive current, leakage current, and threshold voltage of the CMOS transistor under different TID radiation conditions were compared. Under a TID of 500 k Rad(Si), radiation-hardened H-type N-channel metal–oxide–semiconductor transistors had a threshold voltage drift of <100 mV in the worst case, and H-type P-channel metal–oxide–semiconductor transistors had a threshold voltage drift of <150 mV. Under a TID of 1 Mrad(Si), CMOS transistors showed no significant increase in leakage current caused by TID radiation. Under a TID of 500 k Rad(Si), the standby current of the radiation-hardened 32-bit DSP was <1.5 mA. The high-density integrated circuits prepared using this technology performed well under harsh ionizing radiation environments. Finally, this technology was compared with similar foreign technologies and TID-unhardened wafers with hardened wafers. This technology reached the international advanced level among equivalent technologies regarding hole capture cross section and maximum threshold voltage drift in the model. PACS85.30.De 85.30.-e.

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