US20090184733A1 - Layout method for soft-error hard electronics, and radiation hardened logic cell - Google Patents

Layout method for soft-error hard electronics, and radiation hardened logic cell Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20090184733A1
US20090184733A1 US12/354,655 US35465509A US2009184733A1 US 20090184733 A1 US20090184733 A1 US 20090184733A1 US 35465509 A US35465509 A US 35465509A US 2009184733 A1 US2009184733 A1 US 2009184733A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
nets
circuit
single event
net
contact area
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
US12/354,655
Inventor
Klas Olof Lilja
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority to US12/354,655 priority Critical patent/US20090184733A1/en
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Publication of US20090184733A1 publication Critical patent/US20090184733A1/en
Priority to US12/763,139 priority patent/US8495550B2/en
Assigned to UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT; DEFENSE THREAT REDUCTION AGENCY reassignment UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT; DEFENSE THREAT REDUCTION AGENCY CONFIRMATORY LICENSE (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: LILJA, KLAS O, ROBUST CHIP INC.
Priority to US13/277,135 priority patent/US8566770B2/en
Priority to US13/425,231 priority patent/US8468484B2/en
Priority to US13/463,688 priority patent/US20130038348A1/en
Priority to US13/463,706 priority patent/US20130227499A1/en
Priority to US13/692,800 priority patent/US9083341B2/en
Priority to US14/026,648 priority patent/US9081926B2/en
Priority to US14/060,162 priority patent/US20140157223A1/en
Priority to US14/666,043 priority patent/US20160048624A1/en
Assigned to DEFENSE THREAT REDUCTION AGENCY, US DOD reassignment DEFENSE THREAT REDUCTION AGENCY, US DOD CONFIRMATORY LICENSE (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: ROBUST CHIP INC.
Assigned to DEFENSE THREAT REDUCTION AGENCY, US DOD reassignment DEFENSE THREAT REDUCTION AGENCY, US DOD CONFIRMATORY LICENSE (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: ROBUST CHIP INC.
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06FELECTRIC DIGITAL DATA PROCESSING
    • G06F30/00Computer-aided design [CAD]
    • G06F30/30Circuit design
    • G06F30/39Circuit design at the physical level
    • G06F30/392Floor-planning or layout, e.g. partitioning or placement
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03KPULSE TECHNIQUE
    • H03K19/00Logic circuits, i.e. having at least two inputs acting on one output; Inverting circuits
    • H03K19/0175Coupling arrangements; Interface arrangements
    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06FELECTRIC DIGITAL DATA PROCESSING
    • G06F30/00Computer-aided design [CAD]
    • G06F30/30Circuit design
    • G06F30/32Circuit design at the digital level
    • G06F30/33Design verification, e.g. functional simulation or model checking
    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06FELECTRIC DIGITAL DATA PROCESSING
    • G06F30/00Computer-aided design [CAD]
    • G06F30/30Circuit design
    • G06F30/39Circuit design at the physical level
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03KPULSE TECHNIQUE
    • H03K19/00Logic circuits, i.e. having at least two inputs acting on one output; Inverting circuits
    • H03K19/003Modifications for increasing the reliability for protection
    • H03K19/0033Radiation hardening
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03KPULSE TECHNIQUE
    • H03K19/00Logic circuits, i.e. having at least two inputs acting on one output; Inverting circuits
    • H03K19/003Modifications for increasing the reliability for protection
    • H03K19/0033Radiation hardening
    • H03K19/00338In field effect transistor circuits
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03KPULSE TECHNIQUE
    • H03K19/00Logic circuits, i.e. having at least two inputs acting on one output; Inverting circuits
    • H03K19/02Logic circuits, i.e. having at least two inputs acting on one output; Inverting circuits using specified components
    • H03K19/173Logic circuits, i.e. having at least two inputs acting on one output; Inverting circuits using specified components using elementary logic circuits as components
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03KPULSE TECHNIQUE
    • H03K19/00Logic circuits, i.e. having at least two inputs acting on one output; Inverting circuits
    • H03K19/20Logic circuits, i.e. having at least two inputs acting on one output; Inverting circuits characterised by logic function, e.g. AND, OR, NOR, NOT circuits
    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06FELECTRIC DIGITAL DATA PROCESSING
    • G06F2119/00Details relating to the type or aim of the analysis or the optimisation
    • G06F2119/18Manufacturability analysis or optimisation for manufacturability
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02PCLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES IN THE PRODUCTION OR PROCESSING OF GOODS
    • Y02P90/00Enabling technologies with a potential contribution to greenhouse gas [GHG] emissions mitigation
    • Y02P90/02Total factory control, e.g. smart factories, flexible manufacturing systems [FMS] or integrated manufacturing systems [IMS]

Definitions

  • This invention comprises a layout method to effectively protect logic circuits against soft errors (non-destructive errors) and circuit cells, with layout, which are protected against soft errors.
  • the method protects against cases where multiple nodes in circuit are affected by a single event. These events lead to multiple errors in the circuit, and while several methods exist to deal with single node errors, multiple node errors are very hard to deal with using any currently existing protection methods.
  • the method is particularly useful for CMOS based logic circuits in modern technologies ( ⁇ 90 nm), where the occurrence of multiple node pulses becomes high (due to the high integration level). It uses a unique layout configuration, which makes the circuits protected against single event generated soft-errors.
  • TMR triple mode redundancy
  • BiSER built-in soft-error resilience
  • Error correction codes for memory, which also (loosely) could be classified as RHBD, is more efficient than duplication/triplication and can, with additional overhead, handle multiple errors in memory circuitry.
  • ECC Error correction codes
  • RHBD Error correction codes
  • the application of a corresponding error correction to logic circuits is very limited and application specific (e.g., selective parity check or insertion of specialized checking circuit IP).
  • a radiation generated single event (soft-) error occurs when the charge, generated in the semiconductor material by one or more (e.g. secondary) charge particles, is collected by contact areas on the semiconductor substrate. This leads to current pulses on the circuit nets, connected to these contact areas, which, in their turn, cause voltage pulses in the circuit which can upset a sequential element (latch, flip-flop) or propagate through combinational logic and be latched in as errors at the next sequential element in the circuit.
  • This invention comprises a unique new layout method, which takes advantage of the overall circuit response to a single event effect, and, furthermore, comprises circuit cells, with layout, which are protected against soft errors.
  • the method uses an arrangement of critical contact areas in such a way that single event pulses in the circuit, that are generated on multiple nodes, act to oppose each other and hence cancel (or greatly reduce the effect of the single event).
  • a primary and secondary circuit is used to maintain, or process the signal in a circuit
  • addition rules, described in section 4 are used, so that no possibility remains that a error is generated in both primary and secondary circuit, and hence that the combination of primary and secondary circuit will be fully error free.
  • Table 1 The state for the nodes in a circuit that uses a primary (nodes n 1 ,n 2 ) and secondary (nodes n 3 ,n 4 ) circuit for storage or processing of the state.
  • Drawing 1 Primary opposing nodes in a latch cell.
  • Drawing 2 A principal arrangement of opposing node of a latch circuit.
  • FIG. 3 Basic netlist for the DICE latch cell (prior art [Nic05]) with nodes 1 - 4 .
  • p 1 -p 4 and n 1 -n 4 are the pMOSFET drains and the nMOSFET drains, respectively.
  • ns/ps are the source contacts for the two mosfets who's drains are adjacent.).
  • p 1 -p 4 and n 1 -n 4 are the pMOSFET drains and the nMOSFET drains of the 4 main storage nodes, respectively. Any cyclic simultaneous permutation of the n and p nodes will be equivalent (and part of the invention).
  • the mosfets can be placed in separate active areas, or the adjacent n and p nodes can be placed in the same active area.
  • the MOSFET sources can be placed in the line of the drains or in the direction vertical to the line of the drain nodes.
  • the well contacts can be placed on either side only, or also surround the adjacent node pairs.
  • the nodes can also be arranged in a different order subject to the following rules: two adjacent n-drains, or two adjacent p-drains are always an odd/even pair (e.g., p 1 & p 2 , or n 2 and n 3 ), adjacent n-drain to p-drain are always an odd/odd or and even/even pair (e.g., n 2 & p 2 , or p 3 & n 1 ).
  • Drawing 5 Net-list corresponding to the second preferred arrangement.
  • the yellow MOSFET may or may not be included, as long as node 6 is connected to drain 6 a in drawing 5 , and p 1 and 6 a are physically separate.
  • Drawing 6 A second preferred layout arrangement. ns/ps are the source contacts for the two mosfets who's drains are adjacent. Node 6 a and 6 b are connected. The yellow gate adjacent to node 6 a may or may not be included (both variants included in the claims), but p 1 and 6 a are physically separate.
  • the layout derives from the layout in drawing 1 , and the same variants w.r.t. node permutations, active, source, and well contact arrangements apply.
  • Drawing 7 Net-list corresponding to the third preferred arrangement.
  • the yellow MOSFET may or may not be included, as long as node 6 is connected to drain 6 a in drawing 4 , and p 1 and 6 a are physically separate, and node 7 is connected to drain 7 a in drawing 4 , and n 1 and 7 a are physically separate.
  • Drawing 8 A third preferred layout arrangement. ns/ps are the source contacts for the two mosfets who's drains are adjacent. Node 6 a - 6 b are connected, as are node 7 a / 7 b .
  • the yellow gate adjacent to node 6 a and 7 a may or may not be included (both variants included in the claims), but the adjacent drain areas are physically separate.
  • the layout derives from the layout in drawing 1 , and the same variants w.r.t. node permutations, active, source, and well contact arrangements apply.
  • Drawing 9 Net-list corresponding to the fourth preferred arrangement.
  • the yellow MOSFET may or may not be included, as long as node 6 is connected to drain 6 a , 7 to 7 a , 8 to 8 a , and 9 to 9 a in drawing 8 , and 6 a , 7 a , 8 a , 9 a are physically separate from their adjacent main drain node.
  • Drawing 10 A fourth preferred layout arrangement.
  • ns/ps are the source contacts for the two mosfets who's drains are adjacent.
  • Node 6 a / 6 b , 7 a / 7 b , 8 a / 8 b , and 9 a / 9 b are connected.
  • the yellow gates adjacent to nodes 6 a , 7 a , 8 a , 9 a may or may not be included (both variants included in the claims), but nodes 6 a , 7 a , 8 a , 9 a are physically separate from their adjacent MOSFET drains.
  • the layout derives from the layout in drawing 1 , and the same variants w.r.t.
  • node permutations, active, source, and well contact arrangements apply.
  • the claims also cover the various additional variants where and combination of the extra nodes 6 a / 6 b , 7 a / 7 b , 8 a / 8 b , 9 a / 9 b have been included or omitted.
  • Drawing 11 Circuit schematic and layout for duplicated latch cells (e.g. for BISER) using placement and sizing to ensure complete hardness against single and multiple node single event effects.
  • the primary latch can only be upset when node 1 is HIGH
  • the redundant latch can only be upset when node 1 (r) is LOW.
  • any single event that affects both latches can only upset one of the two latches in the BISER configuration, and therefore, cannot generate an error.
  • Drawing 12 Example of a duplicated circuit of claim 9 AND 10 .
  • error signals on both primary and redundant nodes can be generated if both ndrain 0 and pdrain 1 are affected (if D is high) or if both ndrain 1 and pdrain 0 are affected (D low).
  • This invention comprises a unique new layout method, which takes advantage of the overall circuit response to a single event effect. It also includes specific circuit cells with layout, which have been constructed in accordance with the new layout method.
  • a radiation generated single event (soft-) error (SEE) occurs when the charge, generated in the semiconductor material by one or more (e.g. secondary) charged particles, is collected by contact areas.
  • the contact areas are the low resistivity regions on, or in, the semiconductor substrate, which are connected to a net in the circuit, e.g., the source and drain areas in a MOSFET technology.
  • a circuit net (or node) refers to a part of the circuit, connected by low resistivity regions (metal), which maintains a certain voltage value (referred to as the voltage state of the net) throughout its' extent.
  • a net can be connected to any number of contact areas.
  • the charge collected by contact areas during a single event leads to current pulses in the circuit, which, in their turn, cause a change in the voltage of the circuit nets, connected to these contact areas, i,e, a voltage pulse in the circuit.
  • These pulses can upset a sequential element (latch, flip-flop) or propagate through combinational logic (i.e., a set of digital logic gates) and be latched in as errors at the next sequential element in the circuit.
  • a single event can have the effect of increasing the voltage on the net connected to the contact area, or decreasing it, depending on where the contact areas are located in substrate, and how they are connected to the circuit.
  • the method in this invention uses an arrangement of contact areas in such a way that single event generated pulses in the circuit, that occur on multiple contact areas, acts to oppose each other, w.r.t. the effects they have on the voltage of the circuit nets, and hence cancel (or greatly reduce the effect of the single event).
  • the method also comprises an adjustment the strength of the effect a single event has on the voltage of the circuit nets, when this is desirable to achieve the desired total effect on the circuit.
  • This adjustment can be achieved by changing the sizes of the contact areas, and by changing their positions relative to other components in the layout.
  • the method can be applied to sequential logic elements (latches, flip-flops, memory cells), to combinational logic (a connection of one or more digital logic gates), or to analog circuit cells.
  • the first, section 4.1 uses a placement, and strength adjustment, such that the single event effects, on several contact areas, cancel out each other, in terms of their effect on the circuit nets they are connected to.
  • the second, section 4.2 uses a placement, and strength adjustment, such that two, or more, redundant nets in the circuit, are affected differently by a single event, in such a way that a single event cannot simultaneously change their voltage state on several of the redundant nets.
  • redundant nets place the contact areas of the redundant nets in a direction, which is such that when the charge from one single event effects both primary, and redundant nets, it is in the direction which is such that it always also affects both opposing nodes in either the primary or the secondary circuit, or that it affects the opposing node of both primary and secondary circuit.
  • step one and two above would use the following to characterize the effect of a single event on a source or drain contact area:
  • step 3 above would use the following rules for two nodes, each connected to a net carrying redundant signals (primary and secondary nets):
  • an alternative to synthesizing a layout where single event effects cancel out each other is to deliberately let one of the contact areas be stronger w.r.t. single event charge collection. This contact area will then always determine the outcome of a single event in on the connected net (e.g., for a p-drain it would always end up HIGH (at Vdd)).
  • FIG. 1 shows the schematics of the fundamental components of a latch circuit implemented in a CMOS technology.
  • each of the two (main) net is connected to two contacts areas in the layout (the nmos device drain and the pmos drain).
  • FIG. 2 shows such an arrangement where we have utilized the first two of the opposing contact area identifications above. We now have a latch which cannot be upset if the single event has such a directions that is passes the two nets of the circuit.
  • Step 3 in methodology number 1, as well as method number 2 concerns the case when an additional (redundant) circuit (here a latch) is available.
  • an additional (redundant) circuit here a latch
  • n 1 , n 2 from the primary latch
  • n 3 , n 4 from the secondary latch.
  • the nodes from one latch will be in opposite states, and, during correct circuit operation, each node in the primary latch will always have the same state as one node in the secondary latch. This situation is shown in table 1, where n 1 and n 3 maintain the same state, and n 2 and n 4 maintain the same state.
  • step 3 the nodes of the second latch are now placed, w.r.t. the first latch, such that when an extended event occurs that affects both latches, it will be in a direction which affects both opposing nodes in each individual latch, or at least in one of them.
  • FIG. 11 shows such an arrangement, where the method with dominating nodes (methodology 2 above) has been used, and the two latches have been placed in such a way relative to each other that at the most, one of the latches can be upset, by any single event, but not both.
  • a filtering, or voting circuit is used.
  • the filtering ensuring that at any time where one of the redundant nets is wrong (e.g., for the redundant nets carrying the same voltage state; if the voltage states differ) the signal is not allowed to pass through the filtering circuit.
  • the Built-In Soft Error (BISER) design [Mitra2005] is an example of such a configuration.
  • a voting circuit being used on at least 3 redundant circuit, performs a vote between the voltage states of the redundant nets.
  • Triple mode redundancy (TMR) configurations use this type of redundancy.
  • This invention also comprises several specific DICE cells, created using the layout method.
  • the principal arrangement of the 4 storage nets, of the DICE cells in this inventions, is that the contact areas of the nets are placed along one direction (e.g., drawing 4 ), and that they have a certain order, than minimizes or removes the effect of the single event, and hence reduces or removes the possibility that the storage element can be upset by a single event.
  • the first variant (variant 1 ) is shown in drawing 4 .
  • the MOSFET pairs have been placed in the same active area with a common MOSFET source contact in-between. However, they can also be placed in separate active areas, using separate sources contacts, and they can also be oriented so that the sources are perpendicular to the direction of the drain nodes.
  • the most sensitive node pair in variant 2 is the n 1 -p 4 node pair, this pair is protected with the extension in variant 3 (drawings 7 - 8 ).
  • the latch can be made symmetric by adding additional protective nodes. A fully symmetric arrangement of protective nodes is shown in drawings 9 - 10 (third variant).
  • additional protective MOSFETs has a general application to circuits which uses redundant nets.
  • they can be used to keep the state of a circuit node which becomes floating (not connected to the power, i.e., to VSS or VDD) during a single event.
  • Floating nets become very sensitive to the single event charge, their voltage state can change very easily (i.e., even by very weak interaction with the single event).
  • the additional protective devices even if they just turn on partially during the single event, will make the nodes, that become floating during a single event, much more stable.
  • Another (not DICE) example of the addition of such protective devices for a c-element filtering circuit is shown in drawing 13 .
  • the invention also comprises a combinational circuit where all, or some of the nets have been duplicated, in such a way that there is one (primary) net that carries the signal, and a second (redundant) net carries the inverse of the signal on the primary net (i.e., when the voltage on the primary net is high, the voltage on the redundant net is always low, and vice versa), and where, in accordance with the layout method, the contact areas of the primary and redundant net, are placed in such a way that when a single event affects both nets, a voltage pulse can only be generated on one of the nets, but not on both.

Abstract

This invention comprises a layout method to effectively protect logic circuits against soft errors (non-destructive errors) and circuit cells, with layout, which are protected against soft errors. In particular, the method protects against cases where multiple nodes in circuit are affected by a single event. These events lead to multiple errors in the circuit, and while several methods exist to deal with single node errors, multiple node errors are very hard to deal with using any currently existing protection methods. The method is particularly useful for CMOS based logic circuits in modem technologies (≦90 nm), where the occurrence of multiple node pulses becomes high (due to the high integration level). It uses a unique layout configuration, which makes the circuits protected against single event generated soft-errors.

Description

    CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
  • This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Nos. 61/011,599 filed Jan. 17, 2008; 61/011,989 filed Jan. 22, 2008; 61/068,483 filed Mar. 7, 2008; and 61/123,003 filed Apr. 5, 2008, which are incorporated herein by reference.
  • GOVERNMENT SUPPORT
  • This invention was made with Government support under W31P4Q-06-C-0097 awarded by DARPA and FA9451-06-C-0383 awarded by DTRA. The Government has certain rights in the invention.
  • BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
  • 1. Field of the Invention
  • This invention comprises a layout method to effectively protect logic circuits against soft errors (non-destructive errors) and circuit cells, with layout, which are protected against soft errors. In particular, the method protects against cases where multiple nodes in circuit are affected by a single event. These events lead to multiple errors in the circuit, and while several methods exist to deal with single node errors, multiple node errors are very hard to deal with using any currently existing protection methods. The method is particularly useful for CMOS based logic circuits in modern technologies (≦90 nm), where the occurrence of multiple node pulses becomes high (due to the high integration level). It uses a unique layout configuration, which makes the circuits protected against single event generated soft-errors.
  • The problem of soft errors generated by single event transients (and single event upsets) is expected to increase drastically in ultra-deep submicron (≦90 nm) technologies. Of particular significance is that logic circuits are expected to become much more sensitive to radiation generated soft-errors and possibly surpass memory as the major source of single event errors. Furthermore, the generation rate of multiple errors, multiple bit upsets (MBU), single-event multiple upset (SEMU) increases.
  • The main reason for this is that, with a higher feature integration and higher frequencies, the spatial distribution and pulse length of a single event transient (SET) becomes relatively larger, increasing the probability that an SET pulse is latched-in as a (soft-) error, or that SET pulses are generated simultaneously on several circuit nodes by one single event.
  • The problem with increasing soft-error rates is further complicated by the escalating cost of semiconductor design and manufacturing. The high cost involved in developing and maintaining a semiconductor FAB makes it highly desirable to use standard commercial semiconductor manufacturing also for applications that require a high radiation tolerance. Hence, there is a strong drive to develop efficient and robust radhard-by-design (RHBD) techniques for these applications.
  • Furthermore, the design process is also becoming very complex and expensive, and it would be highly desirable to be able to re-use standard design IP and libraries as much as possible for radhard applications.
  • 2. Prior Art
  • Current radhard-by-design technology for single event errors include triplication (triple mode redundancy, TMR) or duplication (e.g., built-in soft-error resilience, BiSER). These circuits carry two or more redundant copies of a signal, and use some form of voting, or filtering, circuitry to determine the correct signal among the redundant signals. Filtering preventing a signal to pass in the case that one of the redundant signals is wrong (by comparing the value of the redundant signals), and voting circuits selects the correct signal from the majority among several (3 or more) redundant signals.
  • These techniques generate undesirable power and area overhead, and current versions of these techniques cannot handle MBUs or SEMUs. Error correction codes, ECC, for memory, which also (loosely) could be classified as RHBD, is more efficient than duplication/triplication and can, with additional overhead, handle multiple errors in memory circuitry. However, the application of a corresponding error correction to logic circuits is very limited and application specific (e.g., selective parity check or insertion of specialized checking circuit IP).
  • State-of-the art for layout techniques for soft-error hard design mainly consist of simple spacing and sizing, and in adding additional contacts.
  • BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • A radiation generated single event (soft-) error (SEE) occurs when the charge, generated in the semiconductor material by one or more (e.g. secondary) charge particles, is collected by contact areas on the semiconductor substrate. This leads to current pulses on the circuit nets, connected to these contact areas, which, in their turn, cause voltage pulses in the circuit which can upset a sequential element (latch, flip-flop) or propagate through combinational logic and be latched in as errors at the next sequential element in the circuit.
  • This invention comprises a unique new layout method, which takes advantage of the overall circuit response to a single event effect, and, furthermore, comprises circuit cells, with layout, which are protected against soft errors. The method uses an arrangement of critical contact areas in such a way that single event pulses in the circuit, that are generated on multiple nodes, act to oppose each other and hence cancel (or greatly reduce the effect of the single event). In the case that a primary and secondary circuit is used to maintain, or process the signal in a circuit, addition rules, described in section 4, are used, so that no possibility remains that a error is generated in both primary and secondary circuit, and hence that the combination of primary and secondary circuit will be fully error free.
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS AND FIGURES
  • Table 1. The state for the nodes in a circuit that uses a primary (nodes n1,n2) and secondary (nodes n3,n4) circuit for storage or processing of the state.
  • Drawing 1. Primary opposing nodes in a latch cell.
  • Drawing 2. A principal arrangement of opposing node of a latch circuit.
  • Drawing 3. Basic netlist for the DICE latch cell (prior art [Nic05]) with nodes 1-4. p1-p4 and n1-n4 are the pMOSFET drains and the nMOSFET drains, respectively.
  • Drawing 4. A first preferred layout arrangement for the layout of the DICE latch cell. ns/ps are the source contacts for the two mosfets who's drains are adjacent.). p1-p4 and n1-n4 are the pMOSFET drains and the nMOSFET drains of the 4 main storage nodes, respectively. Any cyclic simultaneous permutation of the n and p nodes will be equivalent (and part of the invention). The mosfets can be placed in separate active areas, or the adjacent n and p nodes can be placed in the same active area. The MOSFET sources can be placed in the line of the drains or in the direction vertical to the line of the drain nodes. The well contacts can be placed on either side only, or also surround the adjacent node pairs. The nodes can also be arranged in a different order subject to the following rules: two adjacent n-drains, or two adjacent p-drains are always an odd/even pair (e.g., p1 & p2, or n2 and n3), adjacent n-drain to p-drain are always an odd/odd or and even/even pair (e.g., n2 & p2, or p3 & n1).
  • Drawing 5. Net-list corresponding to the second preferred arrangement. The yellow MOSFET may or may not be included, as long as node 6 is connected to drain 6 a in drawing 5, and p1 and 6 a are physically separate.
  • Drawing 6. A second preferred layout arrangement. ns/ps are the source contacts for the two mosfets who's drains are adjacent. Node 6 a and 6 b are connected. The yellow gate adjacent to node 6 a may or may not be included (both variants included in the claims), but p1 and 6 a are physically separate. The layout derives from the layout in drawing 1, and the same variants w.r.t. node permutations, active, source, and well contact arrangements apply.
  • Drawing 7. Net-list corresponding to the third preferred arrangement. The yellow MOSFET may or may not be included, as long as node 6 is connected to drain 6 a in drawing 4, and p1 and 6 a are physically separate, and node 7 is connected to drain 7 a in drawing 4, and n1 and 7 a are physically separate.
  • Drawing 8. A third preferred layout arrangement. ns/ps are the source contacts for the two mosfets who's drains are adjacent. Node 6 a-6 b are connected, as are node 7 a/7 b. The yellow gate adjacent to node 6 a and 7 a may or may not be included (both variants included in the claims), but the adjacent drain areas are physically separate. The layout derives from the layout in drawing 1, and the same variants w.r.t. node permutations, active, source, and well contact arrangements apply.
  • Drawing 9. Net-list corresponding to the fourth preferred arrangement. The yellow MOSFET may or may not be included, as long as node 6 is connected to drain 6 a, 7 to 7 a, 8 to 8 a, and 9 to 9 a in drawing 8, and 6 a, 7 a, 8 a, 9 a are physically separate from their adjacent main drain node.
  • Drawing 10. A fourth preferred layout arrangement. ns/ps are the source contacts for the two mosfets who's drains are adjacent. Node 6 a/6 b, 7 a/7 b, 8 a/8 b, and 9 a/9 b are connected. The yellow gates adjacent to nodes 6 a,7 a, 8 a, 9 a may or may not be included (both variants included in the claims), but nodes 6 a, 7 a, 8 a, 9 a are physically separate from their adjacent MOSFET drains. The layout derives from the layout in drawing 1, and the same variants w.r.t. node permutations, active, source, and well contact arrangements apply. Naturally the claims also cover the various additional variants where and combination of the extra nodes 6 a/6 b, 7 a/7 b, 8 a/8 b, 9 a/9 b have been included or omitted.
  • Drawing 11. Circuit schematic and layout for duplicated latch cells (e.g. for BISER) using placement and sizing to ensure complete hardness against single and multiple node single event effects. For a single event affecting several nodes, the primary latch can only be upset when node 1 is HIGH, and the redundant latch can only be upset when node 1 (r) is LOW. Hence, any single event that affects both latches, can only upset one of the two latches in the BISER configuration, and therefore, cannot generate an error.
  • Drawing 12. Example of a duplicated circuit of claim 9 AND 10. In a duplicated inverter where the redundant and primary nodes carry opposite states, error signals on both primary and redundant nodes can be generated if both ndrain0 and pdrain1 are affected (if D is high) or if both ndrain1 and pdrain0 are affected (D low). By placing the nodes such, that if a particle trace goes through two nodes that can cause an error transient on both primary and redundant output, then the trace also passes through the other nodes and the pulse on one of the nets are suppressed. For example, consider the trace in the figure; if node 0 is high, the charge collected on ndrain0 will pull node 0 low (error transient), the charge collected on node pdrain1 will pull node 1 high, however, the charge collected on node ndrain1 will pull node 1 low, opposing the effect on pdrain1, and keeping node 1 low (i.e., preventing the transient on node 1). If node 0 is low, the charge collected on node ndrain1, will pull node 1 low (error transient), however, the charge collected at ndrain0, will keep node 0 low (i.e., preventing a transient on node 0). If should be pointed out that in the general case there will be some pulses on all nodes, but that it will always hold true that a full swing pulse (a transient that can propagate) only can be generated on one, and one only, of the duplicated nodes.
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION AND HOW IT WORKS
  • This invention comprises a unique new layout method, which takes advantage of the overall circuit response to a single event effect. It also includes specific circuit cells with layout, which have been constructed in accordance with the new layout method.
  • A radiation generated single event (soft-) error (SEE) occurs when the charge, generated in the semiconductor material by one or more (e.g. secondary) charged particles, is collected by contact areas. The contact areas are the low resistivity regions on, or in, the semiconductor substrate, which are connected to a net in the circuit, e.g., the source and drain areas in a MOSFET technology. A circuit net (or node) refers to a part of the circuit, connected by low resistivity regions (metal), which maintains a certain voltage value (referred to as the voltage state of the net) throughout its' extent. A net can be connected to any number of contact areas.
  • The charge collected by contact areas during a single event, leads to current pulses in the circuit, which, in their turn, cause a change in the voltage of the circuit nets, connected to these contact areas, i,e, a voltage pulse in the circuit. These pulses can upset a sequential element (latch, flip-flop) or propagate through combinational logic (i.e., a set of digital logic gates) and be latched in as errors at the next sequential element in the circuit.
  • The effect of a single event on the voltage on the circuit net, is different for different contact areas, e.g., a single event can have the effect of increasing the voltage on the net connected to the contact area, or decreasing it, depending on where the contact areas are located in substrate, and how they are connected to the circuit. The method in this invention uses an arrangement of contact areas in such a way that single event generated pulses in the circuit, that occur on multiple contact areas, acts to oppose each other, w.r.t. the effects they have on the voltage of the circuit nets, and hence cancel (or greatly reduce the effect of the single event).
  • The method also comprises an adjustment the strength of the effect a single event has on the voltage of the circuit nets, when this is desirable to achieve the desired total effect on the circuit. This adjustment can be achieved by changing the sizes of the contact areas, and by changing their positions relative to other components in the layout.
  • The method can be applied to sequential logic elements (latches, flip-flops, memory cells), to combinational logic (a connection of one or more digital logic gates), or to analog circuit cells.
  • In the following two section details of two specific ways to apply the method are described. The first, section 4.1, uses a placement, and strength adjustment, such that the single event effects, on several contact areas, cancel out each other, in terms of their effect on the circuit nets they are connected to. The second, section 4.2, uses a placement, and strength adjustment, such that two, or more, redundant nets in the circuit, are affected differently by a single event, in such a way that a single event cannot simultaneously change their voltage state on several of the redundant nets.
  • A. Layout Method Using Symmetric Arrangements—Method 1
  • The key steps in method one of the invention are:
  • 1. Identify which contact areas have opposing effects on the circuit nets when they are simultaneously affected by a single event
  • 2. Place these nodes in the layout next to each other, and in a fully symmetric way with respect to other adjacent contact areas
      • a. In particular in a CMOS technology the contact are configured in a symmetric (equivalent) position w.r.t. well junctions and well contacts
      • b. If the two contact areas are part of a sequential element (e.g., a latch), this arrangement ensures that these two nodes cannot be upset by a single event that affects both areas, i.e., an event which has an extended charge (e.g., as generated by a charged particle passing through) which is in such a direction that it affects both these nodes.
      • c. If nodes are part of a combinational element, the arrangement ensures that the generated output pulse is greatly suppressed, when the generation single event affects both nodes, i.e., an event which has an extended charge (e.g., as generated by a charged particle passing through) which is in such a direction that it affects both these nodes.
  • 3. In an element using additional protective circuitry (redundant nets), place the contact areas of the redundant nets in a direction, which is such that when the charge from one single event effects both primary, and redundant nets, it is in the direction which is such that it always also affects both opposing nodes in either the primary or the secondary circuit, or that it affects the opposing node of both primary and secondary circuit.
  • Specifically for CMOS technology, step one and two above would use the following to characterize the effect of a single event on a source or drain contact area:
      • a. When an n-drain (or source) is affected by a single event, the effect of the single event is to reduce the voltage on the net connected to this contact area, i.e., if the node is high is will tend to switch the voltage, when the node is low, it will not tend to switch the voltage.
      • b. When an n-drain (or source) is affected by a single event, the effect of the single event is to reduce the voltage on the net connected to this contact area, i.e., if the node is high is will tend to switch the voltage, when the node is low, it will not tend to switch the voltage.
  • Also, specifically for a CMOS technology, step 3 above, would use the following rules for two nodes, each connected to a net carrying redundant signals (primary and secondary nets):
      • a. When two n-drains (or sources), one connected to the primary net and one to the secondary net, are affected by a single event, and they always have opposite voltage states, then only one of the primary/secondary nets can be upset (i.e., change its' voltage).
      • b. When two p-drains (or sources), one connected to the primary and one to the secondary net, are affected by a single event, and they always have opposite voltage states, then only one of the primary/secondary circuits can be upset.
      • c. When an n-drain (or source) from one net, and a p-drain (or source) from the other net is affected, are affected by a single event, and the nets connected to these drains (sources) always have the same voltage state, then only one of the primary/secondary nets can be upset.
    B. Layout Method Using Asymmetric Arrangements—Method 2
  • For the case of an element that uses primary and redundant nets to store the state (i.e., the voltage or signal), an alternative to synthesizing a layout where single event effects cancel out each other, is to deliberately let one of the contact areas be stronger w.r.t. single event charge collection. This contact area will then always determine the outcome of a single event in on the connected net (e.g., for a p-drain it would always end up HIGH (at Vdd)). When there are four nets that store the state (2 primary nets, two redundant nets), and we make sure that net connected to the contact areas that is made dominant in the primary circuit part, stores the opposite state to the net connected to the contact area that is made dominant in the redundant circuit part, then only one of the two redundant circuit parts can be upset by an event that affects both circuit parts. Using this variant, the robust cell synthesis methodology would be as follows:
  • For designs that use primary and redundant nets to store a state:
      • a. Identify which contact areas have opposing circuit effects when they are simultaneously affected by a single event (in the primary as well as the redundant part)
      • b. Place these nodes in the layout next to each other, and make one of the nodes dominant w. r. t. a single event (e.g., by making the drain area larger, and changing the distance to the well-junction and the well-ties).
      • c. Make sure that the net connected to the dominant contact area of the primary circuit part, stores the opposite state to the net connected to the dominant contact area in the redundant circuit part.
      • d. Place the primary and redundant contact areas, relative to each other, in such a way that a single event the affects both the primary and redundant circuitry, also always affects both the dominant and the non-dominant nodes in the primary and in the redundant part.
        • (i) In this way, either the primary or the redundant part will be in a state where the dominant node will make sure this circuit part cannot be upset (i.e. change its state or voltage). Hence, in any situation only ONE of the redundant parts can be upset by a single event.
    C. Discussion, Clarification, and Specific Circuit Cells
  • In a basic sequential logic circuit element (latch, sram-type memory cell, etc.) there are two main nets that maintain the state. These will always have opposite state (voltage). FIG. 1 shows the schematics of the fundamental components of a latch circuit implemented in a CMOS technology. In this latch, each of the two (main) net is connected to two contacts areas in the layout (the nmos device drain and the pmos drain).
  • In this configuration the contact areas that will have opposing effects with respect to the state of the latch, when affected by the same single event, can be identified as (step 1 above):
      • a. A single event that affects both pmos drains will have opposing effects on the state of the latch
      • b. A single event that affects both nmos drains will have opposing effect on the state of the latch
      • b. A single event that affects both nmos and pmos drain of the same node will have opposing effect on the state of the latch
  • In the symmetric method, we arrange the layout such that drains, with opposing effects, are placed next to each other, in a symmetric arrangement (i.e. w.r.t. symmetric w.r.t the surrounding layout, and having the same shape). This is step 2 in the methodology number 1 above. FIG. 2 shows such an arrangement where we have utilized the first two of the opposing contact area identifications above. We now have a latch which cannot be upset if the single event has such a directions that is passes the two nets of the circuit.
  • Step 3 in methodology number 1, as well as method number 2, concerns the case when an additional (redundant) circuit (here a latch) is available. In a circuit configuration that uses two latches to maintain the states, there will be 4 main nodes, n1, n2, from the primary latch, and n3, n4, from the secondary latch. The nodes from one latch will be in opposite states, and, during correct circuit operation, each node in the primary latch will always have the same state as one node in the secondary latch. This situation is shown in table 1, where n1 and n3 maintain the same state, and n2 and n4 maintain the same state.
  • According to step 3, the nodes of the second latch are now placed, w.r.t. the first latch, such that when an extended event occurs that affects both latches, it will be in a direction which affects both opposing nodes in each individual latch, or at least in one of them. FIG. 11 shows such an arrangement, where the method with dominating nodes (methodology 2 above) has been used, and the two latches have been placed in such a way relative to each other that at the most, one of the latches can be upset, by any single event, but not both.
  • The same situation is the same also for other sequential elements (e.g., memory cells) and the method applies to these elements as well. The method also applies to elements which uses more than 2 nodes to maintain the state, as well as non-sequential elements with a primary and secondary redundant net.
  • TABLE 1
    The state for the nodes in a circuit that uses a primary
    (nodes n1, n2) and secondary (nodes n3, n4) circuit
    for storage or processing of the state.
    Node: n1 n2 n3 n4
    State 0 0 1 0 1
    State 1 1 0 1 0
  • To extract the correct signal from the two, or more, redundant nets, a filtering, or voting circuit is used. The filtering ensuring that at any time where one of the redundant nets is wrong (e.g., for the redundant nets carrying the same voltage state; if the voltage states differ) the signal is not allowed to pass through the filtering circuit. The Built-In Soft Error (BISER) design [Mitra2005] is an example of such a configuration. A voting circuit, being used on at least 3 redundant circuit, performs a vote between the voltage states of the redundant nets. Triple mode redundancy (TMR) configurations use this type of redundancy.
  • This invention also comprises several specific DICE cells, created using the layout method. The DICE (Dual Interlocked Cell) latch [Nic2005], the circuit of which is shown in drawing 3, also uses four nets to store the circuit state, but as can be seen in drawing 3, they are not connected as two separate latches, but in an interlocked way.
  • The principal arrangement of the 4 storage nets, of the DICE cells in this inventions, is that the contact areas of the nets are placed along one direction (e.g., drawing 4), and that they have a certain order, than minimizes or removes the effect of the single event, and hence reduces or removes the possibility that the storage element can be upset by a single event. The first variant (variant 1) is shown in drawing 4. In this variant the MOSFET pairs have been placed in the same active area with a common MOSFET source contact in-between. However, they can also be placed in separate active areas, using separate sources contacts, and they can also be oriented so that the sources are perpendicular to the direction of the drain nodes.
  • In variants 2-4 (drawing 5-10) protective nodes have been added. They act to protect certain sensitive node-pairs and are not (necessarily) active during normal circuit operation. However, they can also be used as active devices connecting their gates to other storage nodes. For example, while variant 1 is much more robust than the normal layout (which does not have other nodes in between the sensitive node pairs), there are still some single event sensitivity remaining, the main being for the node pair p1-n2. By extending variant one as shown in drawings 5-6, the node pair p1-n2 is also protected. This is variant 2. The most sensitive node pair in variant 2 is the n1-p4 node pair, this pair is protected with the extension in variant 3 (drawings 7-8). Finally the latch can be made symmetric by adding additional protective nodes. A fully symmetric arrangement of protective nodes is shown in drawings 9-10 (third variant).
  • The addition of additional protective MOSFETs has a general application to circuits which uses redundant nets. In the same way as in the case of the DICE circuit, they can be used to keep the state of a circuit node which becomes floating (not connected to the power, i.e., to VSS or VDD) during a single event. Floating nets become very sensitive to the single event charge, their voltage state can change very easily (i.e., even by very weak interaction with the single event). The additional protective devices, even if they just turn on partially during the single event, will make the nodes, that become floating during a single event, much more stable. Another (not DICE) example of the addition of such protective devices for a c-element filtering circuit is shown in drawing 13.
  • The invention also comprises a combinational circuit where all, or some of the nets have been duplicated, in such a way that there is one (primary) net that carries the signal, and a second (redundant) net carries the inverse of the signal on the primary net (i.e., when the voltage on the primary net is high, the voltage on the redundant net is always low, and vice versa), and where, in accordance with the layout method, the contact areas of the primary and redundant net, are placed in such a way that when a single event affects both nets, a voltage pulse can only be generated on one of the nets, but not on both. For this type of duplicated combinational circuit, a filtering also needs to be applied to the outputs (at some point before the signal is latched into a single sequential element), which prevents propagation of a signal, unless both nets have their correct state (i.e., one being the inverse of the other). Alternatively sequential elements can also be duplicated, and an error detection and correction added at some point in the circuit (an error being identified by comparing the signal on the two redundant nets). This type of duplicated combinational circuit is shown in drawing 12.

Claims (10)

1. A method for laying out an electronic circuit wherein the electronic circuit comprises contact areas, said method comprising:
a. determining the effect on the voltage state of one or more nets in the circuit, due to a single event occurring near each contact area, for each contact area in the circuit;
b. categorizing the contact areas in such a way that contact areas for which a single event have opposing effects on the voltage state of the nets in the circuit, and for which a single event has a non-opposing effect on the voltage state of the nets in the circuit, are identified;
c. placing these contact areas in such a way that when a single event has opposing effects on the voltage state of the circuit nets, the opposing first and second contact areas are placed as close to each other as permitted by the circuit and by the design rules;
d. placing a first contact area and a second contact area, with non-opposing effects on the voltage state of the nets in the circuit, said non-opposing effects caused by a single event, wherein the first and second contact areas are non-adjoining, and placing a third contact area in between the first and second contact areas, wherein said third contact area has an effect on the voltage state of the nets in the circuit opposing those of the first and second contact areas, and wherein the third contact area's effect on the voltage state of the nets in the circuit is caused by a single event, and
e. adjusting the strength of the effect of a single event on the placed contact areas in such a way that the opposing effects are of the same, but opposite, strength.
2. The method of claim (1), wherein the circuit has at least two nets carrying the same signal (or the signal and its' inverse), where each of these nets have at least two contact areas for which a single event has an opposing effect on the voltage state of said two nets, comprising:
a. placing a first contact area and a second contact area, each from a separate redundant net, for which a single event has the effect of changing the voltage state on the two redundant nets, wherein the first and second contact areas are non-adjoining, and placing a third contact area in between the first and second contact areas, said third contact area having an effect on the voltage state on at least one of the redundant nets, and wherein said effect of the third contact area is caused by a single event and opposes the effects of the first and second contact areas, and
b. adjusting the strength of the effect of a single event on the placed contact areas in such a way that any single event that affects (passes through) the two redundant nets, at maximum can change the state of one of the nets, but never both nets.
3. The method of claim 1 or 2, wherein the circuit utilizes MOSFET devices, further comprising:
a. identifying all MOSFET source (S) and drain (D) doping areas, which are not directly connected to the power-nets (VSS,VDD) as the contact areas of claim (1) and (2); and
b. identifying the n-type MOSFET drains or sources, as contact areas for which a single event have the effect of pulling the voltage state, of the nets connected to this contact area, low, and the p-type MOSFET drains or sources, as contact areas for which a single event have the effect of pulling the voltage state, of the nets connected to this contact area, high.
4. The method of claim 3, further comprising:
a. adding additional MOSFET devices between two nets, which at any time, carry opposite voltage states (high/low voltage level), in such a way that if one (first) of the nets is affected by a single event, such that its' voltage state is changed, then the additional MOSFET device turns on, connecting the two nets, and hence ensures that the state of the second net is not changed; and
b. connecting the sources or drains of the p-type MOSFETs in the two nets by additional p-type MOSFETs with their gates connected to the high level power net (VDD), and connecting the sources or drains of the n-type MOSFETs in the two nets by additional n-type MOSFETs with their gates connected to the low level power net (VSS).
5. A sequential logic or memory cell and layout, which uses two or more latches to store the state of the element, each latch having at least one net that stores the voltage state and at least one net that stores the opposite value (inverse) of the voltage state, comprising:
a. an arrangement of the contact areas of each net (which keep a certain voltage state or its' inverse), in the such a way that the contacts areas of at least 4 of these nets are positioned symmetrically along one line in the layout, and positioned relative to each other such that no two contact areas, which:
i. carry the same voltage state, and for which a single event have the same effect on the voltage state of the net; or
ii. carry different voltage states (i.e., a certain state and its' inverse), and for which a single event have opposite effect on the data (voltage) of the net are placed next to each other.
6. A sequential logic cell, which consist of four inverter circuits, each inverter circuit consisting of one p-type MOSFET and one n-type MOSFET, where the inverters have been connected as a Dual Interlocked Cell (DICE) by connecting the outputs of each inverter to the gate of a p-type MOSFET of another, second, inverter, and to the gate of an n-type MOSFET of another third inverter, each gate being connected to one output only, and hence having four nets, one connected to each inverter output and to two gates, two nets carrying the same voltage state and the two other carrying the inverse of the voltage state of the first two nets, each net having one p-type drain contact area and one n-type drain contact area, comprising:
a. An arrangement where the contact areas of each of the four nets, are placed along a line in the layout; and
b. In which two adjacent n-drain contact areas, or two adjacent p-drain contact areas, always belong to (are connected to) two nets which carry opposite voltage states, and where adjacent n-drain contact areas and p-drain contact areas always belong to nets that carry the same voltage state.
7. The sequential Dual Interlocked Cell (DICE) circuit of claim (6), wherein one or more, additional protective MOSFET devices, are added and connected in between two circuit nets of the sequential element of claim 6, comprising:
a. a configuration where said additional devices are connected such that additional p-type devices having their gates connected to the high voltage level (VDD), and either drain or source being (shared with) the p-type contact area of a first circuit net in the sequential circuit of claim 6, and the other contact (drain or source) either being connected to a source or drain contact area of another second additional p-type MOSFET, said second additional MOSFET having its' other contact (drain or source) being (shared with) the p-type contact area connected to a second net in the sequential circuit, or to a contact area which is adjacent to the p-type drain of the second net of the sequential circuit but not connect to a net, said second net in the sequential circuit having the inverse voltage state of the first net, and, additional n-type devices having their gates connected to the low voltage level (VSS), and either drain or source being (shared with) the n-type contact area of a first circuit net in the sequential circuit of claim 6, and the other contact (drain or source) either being connected to a source or drain contact area of another second additional n-type MOSFET, said second additional MOSFET having its' other contact (drain or source) being (shared with) the n-type contact area connected to a second net in the sequential circuit, or to a contact area which is adjacent to the n-type drain of the second net of the sequential circuit but not connect to a net, said second net in the sequential circuit having the inverse voltage state of the first net; and
b. a configuration where any additional drain or source contact areas belonging to the additional MOSFET devices are placed in the same line in the layout as the contact areas of the sequential circuit of claim 6
8. The sequential logic or memory cell and layout of claim (5), wherein a filtering or voting circuit is connected to the output of redundant nets, said filtering circuit, being used in the case of two redundant nets, preventing a data signal to pass unless both nets have the correct data, said voting circuit used on three redundant nets, performing a vote between the states of the redundant nets, comprising:
a. a layout where the strength of the response to a single event have been adjusted such that the total effect, caused by a single event, on one of the nets (primary) is opposite to the total effect, caused by a single event, on its' redundant counterpart, ensuring that when a single event affects both the primary and redundant nets, one and only one, of these nets can change its state.
9. A combinational circuit, where logic element have been duplicated (either throughout or in selected parts) and hence the data signal is carried by a primary net, and by a secondary net (carrying either the signal or it's inverse), and where either filtering circuits, preventing a signal to pass unless the two redundant nets carry the correct signal, have been place in front of each sequential elements, or the sequential elements also have been duplicated (the latter case requiring an error detection and/or correction at the end of the duplicated circuit chain), comprising:
a. a layout where the contacts areas of two redundant nets (primary and secondary) are placed such that there is no straight line between a first and a second contact area, each from separate redundant nets, ad for which a single event has the effect of changing the voltage state in the net connected to the circuit area, unless there is, along this line, in between the first and second contact area, at least one third contacts area, for which a single event has an opposite effect, to that of the first and second contact areas, on the voltage state of at least one of the two redundant nets.
10. The combinational circuit of claim 9 comprising:
a. a layout where the strength of the response to a single event have been adjusted such that the total effect, caused by a single event, on one of two redundant nets is opposite to the total effect, caused by a single event, on the other of the two redundant nets. ensuring that when a single event affects both of the two redundant nets, only one of these two nets can generate and error signal in the circuit.
US12/354,655 2008-01-17 2009-01-15 Layout method for soft-error hard electronics, and radiation hardened logic cell Abandoned US20090184733A1 (en)

Priority Applications (10)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US12/354,655 US20090184733A1 (en) 2008-01-17 2009-01-15 Layout method for soft-error hard electronics, and radiation hardened logic cell
US12/763,139 US8495550B2 (en) 2009-01-15 2010-04-19 Soft error hard electronic circuit and layout
US13/277,135 US8566770B2 (en) 2008-01-17 2011-10-19 Layout method for soft-error hard electronics, and radiation hardened logic cell
US13/425,231 US8468484B2 (en) 2008-01-17 2012-03-20 Layout method for soft-error hard electronics, and radiation hardened logic cell
US13/463,688 US20130038348A1 (en) 2008-01-17 2012-05-03 Layout method for soft-error hard electronics, and radiation hardened logic cell
US13/463,706 US20130227499A1 (en) 2008-01-17 2012-05-03 Layout method for soft-error hard electronics, and radiation hardened logic cell
US13/692,800 US9083341B2 (en) 2008-01-17 2012-12-03 Soft error resilient circuit design method and logic cells
US14/026,648 US9081926B2 (en) 2008-01-17 2013-09-13 Soft error and radiation hardened sequential logic cell
US14/060,162 US20140157223A1 (en) 2008-01-17 2013-10-22 Circuit and layout design methods and logic cells for soft error hard integrated circuits
US14/666,043 US20160048624A1 (en) 2008-01-17 2015-03-23 Circuit and layout design methods and logic cells for soft error hard integrated circuits

Applications Claiming Priority (5)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US1159908P 2008-01-17 2008-01-17
US1198908P 2008-01-22 2008-01-22
US6848308P 2008-03-07 2008-03-07
US12300308P 2008-04-05 2008-04-05
US12/354,655 US20090184733A1 (en) 2008-01-17 2009-01-15 Layout method for soft-error hard electronics, and radiation hardened logic cell

Related Child Applications (5)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US12/763,139 Continuation-In-Part US8495550B2 (en) 2008-01-17 2010-04-19 Soft error hard electronic circuit and layout
US13/277,135 Division US8566770B2 (en) 2008-01-17 2011-10-19 Layout method for soft-error hard electronics, and radiation hardened logic cell
US13/425,231 Continuation-In-Part US8468484B2 (en) 2008-01-17 2012-03-20 Layout method for soft-error hard electronics, and radiation hardened logic cell
US13/463,706 Continuation-In-Part US20130227499A1 (en) 2008-01-17 2012-05-03 Layout method for soft-error hard electronics, and radiation hardened logic cell
US13/463,688 Continuation-In-Part US20130038348A1 (en) 2008-01-17 2012-05-03 Layout method for soft-error hard electronics, and radiation hardened logic cell

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20090184733A1 true US20090184733A1 (en) 2009-07-23

Family

ID=40875970

Family Applications (3)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US12/354,655 Abandoned US20090184733A1 (en) 2008-01-17 2009-01-15 Layout method for soft-error hard electronics, and radiation hardened logic cell
US13/277,135 Active US8566770B2 (en) 2008-01-17 2011-10-19 Layout method for soft-error hard electronics, and radiation hardened logic cell
US14/026,648 Active US9081926B2 (en) 2008-01-17 2013-09-13 Soft error and radiation hardened sequential logic cell

Family Applications After (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US13/277,135 Active US8566770B2 (en) 2008-01-17 2011-10-19 Layout method for soft-error hard electronics, and radiation hardened logic cell
US14/026,648 Active US9081926B2 (en) 2008-01-17 2013-09-13 Soft error and radiation hardened sequential logic cell

Country Status (6)

Country Link
US (3) US20090184733A1 (en)
EP (2) EP2685633A3 (en)
JP (3) JP2011512026A (en)
KR (1) KR20100138874A (en)
CN (1) CN101919162B (en)
WO (1) WO2009091928A2 (en)

Cited By (17)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20110141636A1 (en) * 2009-12-11 2011-06-16 Honeywell International Inc. Non-aligned antenna effect protection circuit with single event transient hardness
US20120054702A1 (en) * 2010-08-31 2012-03-01 International Business Machines Corporation Techniques for Employing Retiming and Transient Simplification on Netlists That Include Memory Arrays
US8566770B2 (en) 2008-01-17 2013-10-22 Klas Olof Lilja Layout method for soft-error hard electronics, and radiation hardened logic cell
WO2013082611A3 (en) * 2011-12-02 2013-12-19 Robust Chip Inc. Soft error hard electronics layout arrangement and logic cells
WO2014066402A1 (en) * 2012-10-22 2014-05-01 Klas Olof Lilja Circuit and layout design methods and logic cells for soft error hard integrated circuits
US20140245113A1 (en) * 2010-11-19 2014-08-28 Altera Corporation Memory Array with Redundant Bits and Memory Element Voting Circuits
US20140331197A1 (en) * 2011-06-02 2014-11-06 Arizona Board Of Regents On Behalf Of Arizona State University Sequential state elements in triple-mode redundant (tmr) state machines
US9041429B2 (en) 2011-06-02 2015-05-26 Arizona Board Of Regents, A Body Corporate Of The State Of Arizona, Acting For And On Behalf Of Arizona State University Sequential state elements for triple-mode redundant state machines, related methods, and systems
US9054688B2 (en) 2012-09-19 2015-06-09 Arizona Board Of Regents, A Body Corporate Of The State Of Arizona, Acting For And On Behalf Of Arizona State University Sequential state elements radiation hardened by design
US20150286772A1 (en) * 2014-04-07 2015-10-08 TallannQuest LLC Method and system for computer-aided design of radiation-hardened integrated circuits
US20160048624A1 (en) * 2008-01-17 2016-02-18 Klas Olof Lilja Circuit and layout design methods and logic cells for soft error hard integrated circuits
US9379689B2 (en) * 2014-07-18 2016-06-28 SK Hynix Inc. Integrated circuit
US20160229679A1 (en) * 2013-09-20 2016-08-11 Advanced Technology Materials, Inc. Apparatus and method for pressure dispensing of high viscosity liquid-containing materials
US9734272B2 (en) 2014-06-13 2017-08-15 Arizona Board Of Regents On Behalf Of Arizona State University Techniques for generating physical layouts of in silico multi mode integrated circuits
US10014048B2 (en) * 2016-11-08 2018-07-03 SK Hynix Inc. Dual interlocked storage cell (DICE) latch sharing active region with neighbor DICE latch and semiconductor device including the same
US10579536B2 (en) 2016-08-09 2020-03-03 Arizona Board Of Regents On Behalf Of Arizona State University Multi-mode radiation hardened multi-core microprocessors
US11711070B2 (en) 2019-09-27 2023-07-25 Nuvoton Technology Corporation Japan Semiconductor device

Families Citing this family (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8495550B2 (en) * 2009-01-15 2013-07-23 Klas Olof Lilja Soft error hard electronic circuit and layout
CN102314538B (en) * 2011-09-20 2013-04-17 中国科学院微电子研究所 Method for layout of transistors of fault-tolerance storage unit
US9058853B2 (en) * 2012-08-16 2015-06-16 Xilinx, Inc. Integrated circuit having improved radiation immunity
CN103077739B (en) * 2012-12-31 2015-07-29 清华大学 A kind of redundancy structure dynamic random-access storage unit
CN103955571B (en) * 2014-04-22 2017-07-28 北京控制工程研究所 A kind of soft error injection and verification method for Flouride-resistani acid phesphatase chip
CN105609504B (en) * 2015-12-25 2018-11-06 北京时代民芯科技有限公司 A kind of anti-SEU multiple node upsets storage unit domain structure of trap isolated form
CN106876383B (en) * 2017-01-03 2019-08-09 中国人民解放军国防科学技术大学 It is a kind of for bombardment single-ion transient state reinforcement means of the NMOS transistor without area overhead
CN106788380B (en) * 2017-01-12 2020-03-24 深圳大学 Asynchronous set D trigger resistant to single event upset
US11374567B2 (en) * 2017-02-11 2022-06-28 Klas Olof Lilja Circuit for low power, radiation hard logic cell
CN110741551B (en) * 2017-06-15 2021-12-24 卓思私人有限公司 Circuit and method of forming a circuit
KR101984109B1 (en) * 2017-11-22 2019-09-03 한국원자력연구원 Logic cell formed of a radiant mosfet(metal oxide semiconductor field effect transistor)
US10558775B2 (en) 2017-12-20 2020-02-11 International Business Machines Corporation Memory element graph-based placement in integrated circuit design
US11069683B2 (en) * 2018-10-05 2021-07-20 Ics Llc Self restoring logic structures
US11030367B2 (en) 2019-09-11 2021-06-08 International Business Machines Corporation Out-of-context feedback hierarchical large block synthesis (HLBS) optimization

Citations (25)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6278287B1 (en) * 1999-10-27 2001-08-21 The Boeing Company Isolated well transistor structure for mitigation of single event upsets
US6433983B1 (en) * 1999-11-24 2002-08-13 Honeywell Inc. High performance output buffer with ESD protection
US7075337B2 (en) * 2004-06-30 2006-07-11 Bae Systems Information And Electronic Systems Integration, Inc. Single event upset immune keeper circuit and method for dual redundant dynamic logic
US7139190B1 (en) * 2005-06-14 2006-11-21 Xilinx, Inc. Single event upset tolerant memory cell layout
US20070050740A1 (en) * 2005-08-29 2007-03-01 Christian Jacobi Method and System for Performing Functional Formal Verification of Logic Circuits
US20070141794A1 (en) * 2005-10-14 2007-06-21 Silicon Space Technology Corporation Radiation hardened isolation structures and fabrication methods
US20070236246A1 (en) * 2006-03-28 2007-10-11 Honeywell International Inc. Radiation hardened differential output buffer
US20070242537A1 (en) * 2006-03-27 2007-10-18 Honeywell International Inc. Radiation-hardened memory element with multiple delay elements
US7310759B1 (en) * 2001-02-14 2007-12-18 Xilinx, Inc. Techniques for mitigating, detecting, and correcting single event upset effects in systems using SRAM-based field programmable gate arrays
US7343579B2 (en) * 2004-11-30 2008-03-11 Physical Sciences Reconfigurable environmentally adaptive computing
US20080158747A1 (en) * 2005-09-30 2008-07-03 Voldman Steven H Radiation tolerant electrostatic discharge protection networks
US20080290903A1 (en) * 2006-09-15 2008-11-27 International Business Machines Corporation Method and radiation hardened phase frequency detector for implementing enhanced radiation immunity performance
US7515452B1 (en) * 2007-01-03 2009-04-07 Xilinx, Inc. Interleaved memory cell with single-event-upset tolerance
US7523422B2 (en) * 2005-01-06 2009-04-21 Texas Instruments Incorporated Method of fabricating an integrated circuit to improve soft error performance
US7529118B2 (en) * 2007-03-28 2009-05-05 Intel Corporation Generalized interlocked register cell (GICE)
US20090204933A1 (en) * 2008-01-28 2009-08-13 Actel Corporation Single event transient mitigation and measurement in integrated circuits
US7627840B2 (en) * 2006-07-13 2009-12-01 International Business Machines Corporation Method for soft error modeling with double current pulse
US20090322411A1 (en) * 2008-06-30 2009-12-31 Moyer William C Circuit and method for avoiding soft errors in storage devices
US7644311B2 (en) * 2006-03-31 2010-01-05 Integrated Device Technology, Inc. Logic soft error rate prediction and improvement
US7733144B2 (en) * 2008-05-29 2010-06-08 International Business Machines Corporation Radiation hardened CMOS master latch with redundant clock input circuits and design structure therefor
US7759995B2 (en) * 2004-10-15 2010-07-20 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Semiconductor integrated circuit with a logic circuit including a data holding circuit
US7774732B2 (en) * 2007-08-14 2010-08-10 International Business Machines Corporation Method for radiation tolerance by automated placement
US7773442B2 (en) * 2004-06-25 2010-08-10 Cypress Semiconductor Corporation Memory cell array latchup prevention
US20100264953A1 (en) * 2009-01-15 2010-10-21 Klas Olof Lilja Soft Error Hard Electronic Circuit and Layout
US7907461B1 (en) * 2008-03-03 2011-03-15 Xilinx, Inc. Structures and methods of preventing an unintentional state change in a data storage node of a latch

Family Cites Families (49)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5065048A (en) 1988-09-19 1991-11-12 Hitachi, Ltd. Semiconductor logic circuit with noise suppression circuit
JP2859288B2 (en) * 1989-03-20 1999-02-17 株式会社日立製作所 Semiconductor integrated circuit device and method of manufacturing the same
US5111429A (en) * 1990-11-06 1992-05-05 Idaho Research Foundation, Inc. Single event upset hardening CMOS memory circuit
CN2218426Y (en) * 1994-06-16 1996-01-24 东南大学 High performance hybrid integrated optic trunker
JP2778550B2 (en) * 1995-09-08 1998-07-23 日本電気株式会社 Method for manufacturing semiconductor integrated circuit
US5870332A (en) 1996-04-22 1999-02-09 United Technologies Corporation High reliability logic circuit for radiation environment
US5898711A (en) * 1997-05-15 1999-04-27 Vlsi Technology, Inc. Single event upset detection and protection in an integrated circuit
US6127864A (en) * 1998-08-19 2000-10-03 Mission Research Corporation Temporally redundant latch for preventing single event disruptions in sequential integrated circuits
US6326809B1 (en) 1999-09-27 2001-12-04 University Of New Mexico Apparatus for and method of eliminating single event upsets in combinational logic
US6573773B2 (en) 2000-02-04 2003-06-03 University Of New Mexico Conflict free radiation tolerant storage cell
US6614257B2 (en) * 2000-05-12 2003-09-02 Bae Systems Information And Electronics Systems Integration, Inc. Logic architecture for single event upset immunity
US6549443B1 (en) * 2001-05-16 2003-04-15 Rockwell Collins, Inc. Single event upset resistant semiconductor circuit element
JP2002373899A (en) 2001-06-13 2002-12-26 Denso Corp Method for simulating characteristics of semiconductor device
JP2003173681A (en) 2001-12-07 2003-06-20 Mitsubishi Electric Corp Semiconductor memory circuit and latch circuit
JP3718687B2 (en) * 2002-07-09 2005-11-24 独立行政法人 宇宙航空研究開発機構 Inverter, semiconductor logic circuit, static random access memory, and data latch circuit
CN2629309Y (en) * 2003-06-06 2004-07-28 戴迪 Antiinterference protector for electric appliance
JP3722225B2 (en) * 2003-09-01 2005-11-30 セイコーエプソン株式会社 Semiconductor device and semiconductor memory device using the same
US7023235B2 (en) * 2003-12-12 2006-04-04 Universities Research Association, Inc. Redundant single event upset supression system
JP4639342B2 (en) * 2004-02-04 2011-02-23 独立行政法人 宇宙航空研究開発機構 SOI structure single event resistant inverter, semiconductor memory device, and data latch circuit
US7215135B2 (en) * 2004-12-02 2007-05-08 Honeywell International Inc. Single event upset hardened circuitry without sensitivity to overshoot and/or undershoot conditions
JP4783022B2 (en) 2005-01-17 2011-09-28 株式会社東芝 Semiconductor integrated circuit device
JP2006339355A (en) * 2005-06-01 2006-12-14 Nec Electronics Corp Semiconductor integrated circuit device and its designing method
US7236001B2 (en) 2005-09-02 2007-06-26 Honeywell International Inc. Redundancy circuits hardened against single event upsets
US7327197B2 (en) 2005-10-20 2008-02-05 Honeywell International, Inc. Radiation hardened phase locked loop
JP2007124343A (en) * 2005-10-28 2007-05-17 Toshiba Corp Data-holding circuit
US20070096754A1 (en) * 2005-11-03 2007-05-03 Honeywell International Inc. Method and system for analyzing single event upset in semiconductor devices
US7679403B2 (en) * 2005-11-08 2010-03-16 Honeywell International Inc. Dual redundant dynamic logic
US7489538B2 (en) * 2005-11-14 2009-02-10 University Of Idaho Radiation tolerant combinational logic cell
JP4332652B2 (en) 2005-12-12 2009-09-16 独立行政法人 宇宙航空研究開発機構 Single event resistant latch circuit and flip-flop circuit
US7298010B1 (en) * 2006-02-21 2007-11-20 Sandia Corporation Radiation-hardened transistor and integrated circuit
US7864561B2 (en) 2006-07-28 2011-01-04 Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., Ltd. Cell structure with buried capacitor for soft error rate improvement
US7761828B2 (en) 2006-08-18 2010-07-20 Partition Design, Inc. Partitioning electronic circuit designs into simulation-ready blocks
JP4928878B2 (en) 2006-09-11 2012-05-09 株式会社東芝 Nonvolatile semiconductor memory device
US7818702B2 (en) * 2007-02-28 2010-10-19 International Business Machines Corporation Structure incorporating latch-up resistant semiconductor device structures on hybrid substrates
WO2009038817A2 (en) * 2007-04-13 2009-03-26 Klas Olof Lilja Method, and extensions, to couple substrate effects and compact model circuit simulation for efficient simulation of semiconductor devices and circuit
US20090184733A1 (en) 2008-01-17 2009-07-23 Klas Olof Lilja Layout method for soft-error hard electronics, and radiation hardened logic cell
US8468484B2 (en) 2008-01-17 2013-06-18 Klas Olof Lilja Layout method for soft-error hard electronics, and radiation hardened logic cell
US20140157223A1 (en) 2008-01-17 2014-06-05 Klas Olof Lilja Circuit and layout design methods and logic cells for soft error hard integrated circuits
US20130038348A1 (en) 2008-01-17 2013-02-14 Klas Olof Lilja Layout method for soft-error hard electronics, and radiation hardened logic cell
US20130227499A1 (en) 2008-01-17 2013-08-29 Klas Olof Lilja Layout method for soft-error hard electronics, and radiation hardened logic cell
US9083341B2 (en) 2008-01-17 2015-07-14 Robust Chip Inc. Soft error resilient circuit design method and logic cells
US7772874B2 (en) 2008-01-28 2010-08-10 Actel Corporation Single event transient mitigation and measurement in integrated circuits
US7965540B2 (en) 2008-03-26 2011-06-21 International Business Machines Corporation Structure and method for improving storage latch susceptibility to single event upsets
US7961501B1 (en) 2008-07-10 2011-06-14 Ryan Technologies, LLC Radiation sensors and single-event-effects suppression devices
US8054099B2 (en) 2009-07-29 2011-11-08 The Boeing Company Method and apparatus for reducing radiation and cross-talk induced data errors
US8081010B1 (en) 2009-11-24 2011-12-20 Ics, Llc Self restoring logic
JP5433437B2 (en) 2010-01-21 2014-03-05 ルネサスエレクトロニクス株式会社 Semiconductor integrated circuit device
WO2014066402A1 (en) 2012-10-22 2014-05-01 Klas Olof Lilja Circuit and layout design methods and logic cells for soft error hard integrated circuits
US9082624B2 (en) * 2013-01-02 2015-07-14 International Business Machines Corporation Signal path of a multiple-patterned semiconductor device

Patent Citations (26)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6278287B1 (en) * 1999-10-27 2001-08-21 The Boeing Company Isolated well transistor structure for mitigation of single event upsets
US6433983B1 (en) * 1999-11-24 2002-08-13 Honeywell Inc. High performance output buffer with ESD protection
US7310759B1 (en) * 2001-02-14 2007-12-18 Xilinx, Inc. Techniques for mitigating, detecting, and correcting single event upset effects in systems using SRAM-based field programmable gate arrays
US7620883B1 (en) * 2001-02-14 2009-11-17 Xilinx, Inc. Techniques for mitigating, detecting, and correcting single event upset effects
US7773442B2 (en) * 2004-06-25 2010-08-10 Cypress Semiconductor Corporation Memory cell array latchup prevention
US7075337B2 (en) * 2004-06-30 2006-07-11 Bae Systems Information And Electronic Systems Integration, Inc. Single event upset immune keeper circuit and method for dual redundant dynamic logic
US7759995B2 (en) * 2004-10-15 2010-07-20 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Semiconductor integrated circuit with a logic circuit including a data holding circuit
US7343579B2 (en) * 2004-11-30 2008-03-11 Physical Sciences Reconfigurable environmentally adaptive computing
US7523422B2 (en) * 2005-01-06 2009-04-21 Texas Instruments Incorporated Method of fabricating an integrated circuit to improve soft error performance
US7139190B1 (en) * 2005-06-14 2006-11-21 Xilinx, Inc. Single event upset tolerant memory cell layout
US20070050740A1 (en) * 2005-08-29 2007-03-01 Christian Jacobi Method and System for Performing Functional Formal Verification of Logic Circuits
US20080158747A1 (en) * 2005-09-30 2008-07-03 Voldman Steven H Radiation tolerant electrostatic discharge protection networks
US20070141794A1 (en) * 2005-10-14 2007-06-21 Silicon Space Technology Corporation Radiation hardened isolation structures and fabrication methods
US20070242537A1 (en) * 2006-03-27 2007-10-18 Honeywell International Inc. Radiation-hardened memory element with multiple delay elements
US20070236246A1 (en) * 2006-03-28 2007-10-11 Honeywell International Inc. Radiation hardened differential output buffer
US7644311B2 (en) * 2006-03-31 2010-01-05 Integrated Device Technology, Inc. Logic soft error rate prediction and improvement
US7627840B2 (en) * 2006-07-13 2009-12-01 International Business Machines Corporation Method for soft error modeling with double current pulse
US20080290903A1 (en) * 2006-09-15 2008-11-27 International Business Machines Corporation Method and radiation hardened phase frequency detector for implementing enhanced radiation immunity performance
US7515452B1 (en) * 2007-01-03 2009-04-07 Xilinx, Inc. Interleaved memory cell with single-event-upset tolerance
US7529118B2 (en) * 2007-03-28 2009-05-05 Intel Corporation Generalized interlocked register cell (GICE)
US7774732B2 (en) * 2007-08-14 2010-08-10 International Business Machines Corporation Method for radiation tolerance by automated placement
US20090204933A1 (en) * 2008-01-28 2009-08-13 Actel Corporation Single event transient mitigation and measurement in integrated circuits
US7907461B1 (en) * 2008-03-03 2011-03-15 Xilinx, Inc. Structures and methods of preventing an unintentional state change in a data storage node of a latch
US7733144B2 (en) * 2008-05-29 2010-06-08 International Business Machines Corporation Radiation hardened CMOS master latch with redundant clock input circuits and design structure therefor
US20090322411A1 (en) * 2008-06-30 2009-12-31 Moyer William C Circuit and method for avoiding soft errors in storage devices
US20100264953A1 (en) * 2009-01-15 2010-10-21 Klas Olof Lilja Soft Error Hard Electronic Circuit and Layout

Cited By (26)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US9083341B2 (en) 2008-01-17 2015-07-14 Robust Chip Inc. Soft error resilient circuit design method and logic cells
US20160048624A1 (en) * 2008-01-17 2016-02-18 Klas Olof Lilja Circuit and layout design methods and logic cells for soft error hard integrated circuits
US8566770B2 (en) 2008-01-17 2013-10-22 Klas Olof Lilja Layout method for soft-error hard electronics, and radiation hardened logic cell
US9081926B2 (en) 2008-01-17 2015-07-14 Klas Olof Lilja Soft error and radiation hardened sequential logic cell
US20110141636A1 (en) * 2009-12-11 2011-06-16 Honeywell International Inc. Non-aligned antenna effect protection circuit with single event transient hardness
US8217458B2 (en) 2009-12-11 2012-07-10 Honeywell International Inc. Non-aligned antenna effect protection circuit with single event transient hardness
US8418106B2 (en) * 2010-08-31 2013-04-09 International Business Machines Corporation Techniques for employing retiming and transient simplification on netlists that include memory arrays
US20120054702A1 (en) * 2010-08-31 2012-03-01 International Business Machines Corporation Techniques for Employing Retiming and Transient Simplification on Netlists That Include Memory Arrays
US20140245113A1 (en) * 2010-11-19 2014-08-28 Altera Corporation Memory Array with Redundant Bits and Memory Element Voting Circuits
US9582374B2 (en) * 2010-11-19 2017-02-28 Altera Corporation Memory array with redundant bits and memory element voting circuits
US20140331197A1 (en) * 2011-06-02 2014-11-06 Arizona Board Of Regents On Behalf Of Arizona State University Sequential state elements in triple-mode redundant (tmr) state machines
US9038012B2 (en) * 2011-06-02 2015-05-19 Arizona Board Of Regents On Behalf Of Arizona State University Sequential state elements in triple-mode redundant (TMR) state machines
US9041429B2 (en) 2011-06-02 2015-05-26 Arizona Board Of Regents, A Body Corporate Of The State Of Arizona, Acting For And On Behalf Of Arizona State University Sequential state elements for triple-mode redundant state machines, related methods, and systems
WO2013082611A3 (en) * 2011-12-02 2013-12-19 Robust Chip Inc. Soft error hard electronics layout arrangement and logic cells
US9054688B2 (en) 2012-09-19 2015-06-09 Arizona Board Of Regents, A Body Corporate Of The State Of Arizona, Acting For And On Behalf Of Arizona State University Sequential state elements radiation hardened by design
WO2014066402A1 (en) * 2012-10-22 2014-05-01 Klas Olof Lilja Circuit and layout design methods and logic cells for soft error hard integrated circuits
US20160229679A1 (en) * 2013-09-20 2016-08-11 Advanced Technology Materials, Inc. Apparatus and method for pressure dispensing of high viscosity liquid-containing materials
US9802807B2 (en) * 2013-09-20 2017-10-31 Entegris, Inc. Apparatus and method for pressure dispensing of high viscosity liquid-containing materials
US10494250B2 (en) 2013-09-20 2019-12-03 Entegris, Inc. Apparatus and method for pressure dispensing of high viscosity liquid-containing materials
US9569583B2 (en) * 2014-04-07 2017-02-14 TallannQuest LLC Method and system for computer-aided design of radiation-hardened integrated circuits
US20150286772A1 (en) * 2014-04-07 2015-10-08 TallannQuest LLC Method and system for computer-aided design of radiation-hardened integrated circuits
US9734272B2 (en) 2014-06-13 2017-08-15 Arizona Board Of Regents On Behalf Of Arizona State University Techniques for generating physical layouts of in silico multi mode integrated circuits
US9379689B2 (en) * 2014-07-18 2016-06-28 SK Hynix Inc. Integrated circuit
US10579536B2 (en) 2016-08-09 2020-03-03 Arizona Board Of Regents On Behalf Of Arizona State University Multi-mode radiation hardened multi-core microprocessors
US10014048B2 (en) * 2016-11-08 2018-07-03 SK Hynix Inc. Dual interlocked storage cell (DICE) latch sharing active region with neighbor DICE latch and semiconductor device including the same
US11711070B2 (en) 2019-09-27 2023-07-25 Nuvoton Technology Corporation Japan Semiconductor device

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
CN101919162B (en) 2013-12-11
JP2015053498A (en) 2015-03-19
US20140019921A1 (en) 2014-01-16
KR20100138874A (en) 2010-12-31
EP2245740A4 (en) 2013-01-16
JP2011512026A (en) 2011-04-14
US20120185816A1 (en) 2012-07-19
EP2685633A3 (en) 2014-05-07
EP2685633A2 (en) 2014-01-15
WO2009091928A3 (en) 2009-10-22
US9081926B2 (en) 2015-07-14
US8566770B2 (en) 2013-10-22
CN101919162A (en) 2010-12-15
EP2245740B1 (en) 2014-03-12
EP2245740B8 (en) 2014-10-01
JP2016001741A (en) 2016-01-07
WO2009091928A2 (en) 2009-07-23
EP2245740A2 (en) 2010-11-03

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US8566770B2 (en) Layout method for soft-error hard electronics, and radiation hardened logic cell
US8468484B2 (en) Layout method for soft-error hard electronics, and radiation hardened logic cell
US8495550B2 (en) Soft error hard electronic circuit and layout
Li et al. A quatro-based 65-nm flip-flop circuit for soft-error resilience
US20130038348A1 (en) Layout method for soft-error hard electronics, and radiation hardened logic cell
Nan et al. Low cost and highly reliable hardened latch design for nanoscale CMOS technology
Lin et al. Soft-error hardening designs of nanoscale CMOS latches
JP2008522525A (en) Electronic device having logic circuit and method for designing logic circuit.
US10181851B2 (en) Dual interlocked logic circuits
Eftaxiopoulos et al. Low leakage radiation tolerant CAM/TCAM cell
Maharrey et al. Dual-interlocked logic for single-event transient mitigation
Mori et al. Intrinsic vulnerability to soft errors and a mitigation technique by layout optimization on dice flip flops in a 65-nm bulk process
US20130227499A1 (en) Layout method for soft-error hard electronics, and radiation hardened logic cell
Zorian et al. Impact of soft error challenge on SoC design
Shirinzadeh et al. Design and performance evaluation of a low cost full protected CMOS latch
Michels et al. SET fault tolerant combinational circuits based on majority logic
Chang et al. SERL: Soft error resilient latch design
Yazdanshenas et al. A scalable dependability scheme for routing fabric of SRAM-based reconfigurable devices
Katunin et al. Evaluation Based on TCAD Simulation of a Failure Tolerance of the Elements on the Cells STG DICE for 65-nm CMOS Blocks of an Associative Memory
Chong et al. Radiation-Hardened-by-Design (RHBD) Digital Design Approaches: A Case Study on an 8051 Microcontroller
Pande et al. Neutron-Induced Pulsewidth Distribution of Logic Gates Characterized Using a Pulse Shrinking Chain-Based Test Structure
US7642813B2 (en) Error correcting logic system
Petroli et al. Using majority logic to cope with long duration transient faults
Li Study of Layout Techniques in Dynamic Logic Circuitry for Single Event Effect Mitigation
Skoufis Coping with delays and hazards in buses and random logic in deep sub-micron

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AS Assignment

Owner name: UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT; DEFENSE THREAT REDUCTION

Free format text: CONFIRMATORY LICENSE;ASSIGNORS:ROBUST CHIP INC.;LILJA, KLAS O;REEL/FRAME:025368/0467

Effective date: 20101104

STCB Information on status: application discontinuation

Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO RESPOND TO AN OFFICE ACTION

AS Assignment

Owner name: DEFENSE THREAT REDUCTION AGENCY, US DOD, VIRGINIA

Free format text: CONFIRMATORY LICENSE;ASSIGNOR:ROBUST CHIP INC.;REEL/FRAME:043587/0131

Effective date: 20170913

Owner name: DEFENSE THREAT REDUCTION AGENCY, US DOD, VIRGINIA

Free format text: CONFIRMATORY LICENSE;ASSIGNOR:ROBUST CHIP INC.;REEL/FRAME:043587/0235

Effective date: 20170913