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Hand with gloves holding wires connected to integrated circuit on a desk
David Dolt measures the radiation performance of the chips he’s designing at the Texas A&M University Cyclotron Institute. | Image: Emily Oswald, Texas A&M Engineering

With an increase in commercial space flight and further exploration of our solar system on the horizon, there is a growing need for more robust integrated circuits, or chips, capable of weathering the harsh and damaging effects of radiation to which satellites and spacecraft are exposed.

David Dolt, a doctoral student in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Texas A&M University, is working alongside his faculty advisor and professor, Dr. Sam Palermo, to design self-healing radiation-hardened integrated circuits. These integrated circuits, or chips, are designed for the space environment with special circuit techniques that allow them to heal after experiencing damage from radiation.

To accomplish this, Dolt incorporates sensor circuits that monitor the different parts of the chip to ensure that everything is operating as it should. If something changes, these sensor circuits are able to vary things in the main circuit to restore the chip to a nominal working condition and compensate for the radiation-induced performance degradation.

“We are looking at developing a healing methodology that utilizes a micro-heating system that will restore devices with radiation-induced defects to a nominal state,” Dolt said.

Dolt measures the effects of radiation on these chips using two types of testing techniques. First, he performs a total ionizing dose test, which exposes the chip to an equivalent long-term term dose of radiation that degrades the circuit’s nominal performance as it would in a space environment over many years. He also performs single-event effect testing, which is when high-energy particles penetrate the silicon chip and cause instantaneous current pulses, or glitches, in the circuit. Dolt measures the sensitivity of a circuit to single-event effects at the Texas A&M Cyclotron Institute.

There’s a lot to learn and understand in the area, and there's a lot of innovation that I’m excited to continue exploring.

David Dolt

“We use the Texas A&M Cyclotron Institute’s particle accelerator to irradiate the chips and then measure how many upsets occur while we're irradiating it to test the sensitivity of the chip,” Dolt said.

Long-term effects of radiation include disruptions in circuit operation, degradation and a limited lifetime. Dolt’s ultimate goal is to design chips for space applications such as satellites, space vehicles or spacecraft that are more impervious to radiation and subsequently have extended lifetimes.

To accomplish this in the past, chips were manufactured using technology nodes that are inherently robust to radiation. The downside is that these chips are expensive to manufacture and have slow performance and high power. Many companies are still using these old parts in their systems because of their inherent robustness. But now, with commercial spaceflight and other contemporary needs, companies are looking for faster, smaller and less expensive chips that can withstand the harsh environment of space.

“The impact is figuring out hardened-by-design techniques to make our constantly evolving technology nodes as robust to radiation as some of these older radiation-hardened technology nodes,” Dolt said. “You can then have state-of-the-art performance and manufacture chips with lower power and area as well as competitive radiation performance.”

Dolt’s research is supported by the Air Force Research Laboratory.

“There are still a lot of unknowns about this testing and designing these circuits,” he said. “It’s a good area where you can come up with new things and discover new things without being suffocated by all that has already been accomplished. There’s a lot to learn and understand in the area, and there's a lot of innovation that I’m excited to continue exploring.”