Beta Radiation Damage Thresholds and Failure Rates of Micro-SD Cards

ORAL

Abstract

Radiation effects in micro-electronics are a serious concern for their performance and survivability in radiation environments and are divided into 3 categories. Total Ionizing Dose (TID) effects typically result from homogeneous accumulation of ionizing dose from electrons (e$^{\mathrm{-}})$ or protons (p$^{\mathrm{+}})$ over a long time in insulators. Displacement Damage effects typically result from the accumulation of non-ionizing dose from p$^{\mathrm{+}}$ or high energy e$^{\mathrm{-}}$, leading to generation of lattice defects. Single Event Effects typically result from localized, high ionizing doses from a single particle (p$^{\mathrm{+}}$ or heavy ions) in a sensitive region of the devices. $\beta $ tests done here focus on the TID effects. Radiation exposure tests on variety of micro-SD cards were conducted in the Utah State University's Space Survivability Test chamber, using a \textasciitilde 90 mCi $^{\mathrm{90}}$Sr source emitting 0.2 to 2.5 MeV $\beta $ radiation. The unbiased tests evaluated formatting and read/write speeds at a dose rate of \textasciitilde 2.5 Gy/hr for 9 radiation intervals up to \textasciitilde 1000 Gy TID. Micro-SD cards were tolerant up to 400 Gy TID, with almost all failures recovering in $\le $4 hr. At higher TID \textgreater 400 Gy, more failures and less recovery were observed. At the highest TID exposure of 1000 Gy, \textasciitilde 25{\%} of the cards failed altogether with no recovery. The next round of testing will include biased tests, where SD cards will be powered and the current spikes due to transient failures will be monitored.

Authors

  • Achal Duhoon

    Utah State University

  • Rupjyoti Gogoi

    Arizona State University, Colorado State University, University of Utah, Utah State University, George Mason University, Brigham Young University, University of Colorado, Boulder, Georgia Institute of Technology, University of Colorado, Boulder; North China Electric Power University, Argonne National Laboratory, Carnegie Mellon University, Purdue University, Yunnan University, University of Arizona, Ball Aerospace, Ponderosa Associates Limited, Polsinelli PC, Saleh Research Centre, New Mexico State University, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Center for Memory and Recording research, Advanced Photon Source, Chemnitz university of technology, Tezpur University

  • Rupjyoti Gogoi

    Arizona State University, Colorado State University, University of Utah, Utah State University, George Mason University, Brigham Young University, University of Colorado, Boulder, Georgia Institute of Technology, University of Colorado, Boulder; North China Electric Power University, Argonne National Laboratory, Carnegie Mellon University, Purdue University, Yunnan University, University of Arizona, Ball Aerospace, Ponderosa Associates Limited, Polsinelli PC, Saleh Research Centre, New Mexico State University, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Center for Memory and Recording research, Advanced Photon Source, Chemnitz university of technology, Tezpur University