Title :
LAr TPC Electronics CMOS Lifetime at 300 K and 77 K and Reliability Under Thermal Cycling
Author :
Shaorui Li ; Jie Ma ; De Geronimo, G. ; Hucheng Chen ; Radeka, Veljko
Author_Institution :
Brookhaven Nat. Lab., Upton, NY, USA
Abstract :
A study of hot-carrier effects (HCE) on the 180-nm CMOS device lifetime has been performed at 300 K and 77 K for Liquid Argon Time Projection Chamber (LAr TPC). Two different measurements were used: accelerated lifetime measurement under severe electric field stress by the drain-source voltage Vds, and a separate measurement of the substrate current as a function of 1/Vds. The former verifies the canonical very steep slope of the inverse relation between the lifetime and the substrate current, and the latter confirms that below a certain value of Vds a lifetime margin of several orders of magnitude can be achieved for the cold electronics TPC readout. The low power ASIC design for LAr TPC falls naturally into this domain, where hot-electron effects are negligible. Lifetime of digital circuits (ac operation) is extended by the inverse duty factor 1/(fclockteff) compared to dc operation. This factor is large (> 100) for deep submicron technology and clock frequency needed for TPC readout. As an additional margin, Vds may be reduced by ~ 10%. Extremely low failure rate (incidence) in previous large experiments demonstrates that surface mount circuit board technology withstands very well even multiple abrupt immersion in liquid nitrogen applied in board testing, and that the total failure incidence in continuous operation over time is very low.
Keywords :
CMOS integrated circuits; application specific integrated circuits; cryogenic electronics; electric current; hot carriers; integrated circuit design; low-power electronics; nuclear electronics; readout electronics; reliability; surface mount technology; time projection chambers; CMOS device lifetime; LAr TPC electronics CMOS lifetime; TPC readout; ac operation; accelerated lifetime measurement; board testing; canonical very steep slope; clock frequency; cold electronics TPC readout; continuous operation; dc operation; deep submicron technology; digital circuit lifetime; drain-source voltage; electric field stress; extremely low failure rate; hot-carrier effects; hot-electron effects; inverse duty factor; inverse relation; liquid argon time projection chamber; liquid nitrogen; low power ASIC design; multiple abrupt immersion; reliability; substrate current; surface mount circuit board technology; temperature 300 K; temperature 77 K; thermal cycling; total failure incidence; CMOS integrated circuits; Cryogenic electronics; Degradation; Hot carriers; MOS devices; Cryogenic electronics; hot carriers; lifetime;
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNS.2013.2287156