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Dive into the research topics where Marcus H. Mendenhall is active.

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Featured researches published by Marcus H. Mendenhall.


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 2005

The contribution of nuclear reactions to heavy ion single event upset cross-section measurements in a high-density SEU hardened SRAM

Kevin M. Warren; Robert A. Weller; Marcus H. Mendenhall; Robert A. Reed; Dennis R. Ball; Christina L. Howe; B.D. Olson; Michael L. Alles; Lloyd W. Massengill; Ronald D. Schrimpf; Nadim F. Haddad; Scott Doyle; Dale McMorrow; Joseph S. Melinger; William T. Lotshaw

Heavy ion irradiation was simulated using a Geant4 based Monte-Carlo transport code. Electronic and nuclear physics were used to generate statistical profiles of charge deposition in the sensitive volume of an SEU hardened SRAM. Simulation results show that materials external to the sensitive volume can affect the experimentally measured cross-section curve.


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 2010

Monte Carlo Simulation of Single Event Effects

Robert A. Weller; Marcus H. Mendenhall; Robert A. Reed; Ronald D. Schrimpf; Kevin M. Warren; Brian D. Sierawski; Lloyd W. Massengill

In this paper, we describe a Monte Carlo approach for estimating the frequency and character of single event effects based on a combination of physical modeling of discrete radiation events, device simulations to estimate charge transport and collection, and circuit simulations to determine the effect of the collected charge. A mathematical analysis of the procedure reveals it to be closely related to the rectangular parallelepiped (RPP) rate prediction method. The results of these simulations show that event-to-event variation may have a significant impact when predicting the single-event rate in advanced spacecraft electronics. Specific criteria for supplementing established RPP-based single event analysis with Monte Carlo computations are discussed.


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 2009

Impact of Low-Energy Proton Induced Upsets on Test Methods and Rate Predictions

Brian D. Sierawski; Jonathan A. Pellish; Robert A. Reed; Ronald D. Schrimpf; Kevin M. Warren; Robert A. Weller; Marcus H. Mendenhall; Jeffrey D. Black; Alan D. Tipton; Michael A. Xapsos; Robert C. Baumann; Xiaowei Deng; Michael J. Campola; Mark R. Friendlich; Hak S. Kim; Anthony M. Phan; Christina M. Seidleck

Direct ionization from low energy protons is shown to cause upsets in a 65-nm bulk CMOS SRAM, consistent with results reported for other deep submicron technologies. The experimental data are used to calibrate a Monte Carlo rate prediction model, which is used to evaluate the importance of this upset mechanism in typical space environments. For the ISS orbit and a geosynchronous (worst day) orbit, direct ionization from protons is a major contributor to the total error rate, but for a geosynchronous (solar min) orbit, the proton flux is too low to cause a significant number of events. The implications of these results for hardness assurance are discussed.


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 2006

Multiple-Bit Upset in 130 nm CMOS Technology

Alan D. Tipton; Jonathan A. Pellish; Robert A. Reed; Ronald D. Schrimpf; Robert A. Weller; Marcus H. Mendenhall; Brian D. Sierawski; Akil K. Sutton; Ryan M. Diestelhorst; Gustavo Espinel; John D. Cressler; Paul W. Marshall; Gyorgy Vizkelethy

The probability of proton-induced multiple-bit upset (MBU) has increased in highly-scaled technologies because device dimensions are small relative to particle event track size. Both proton-induced single event upset (SEU) and MBU responses have been shown to vary with angle and energy for certain technologies. This work analyzes SEU and MBU in a 130 nm CMOS SRAM in which the single-event response shows a strong dependence on the angle of proton incidence. Current proton testing methods do not account for device orientation relative to the proton beam and, subsequently, error rate prediction assumes no angular dependencies. Proton-induced MBU is expected to increase as integrated circuits continue to scale into the deep sub-micron regime. Consequently, the application of current testing methods will lead to an incorrect prediction of error rates


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 2007

Impact of Ion Energy and Species on Single Event Effects Analysis

Robert A. Reed; Robert A. Weller; Marcus H. Mendenhall; Jean-Marie Lauenstein; Kevin M. Warren; Jonathan A. Pellish; Ronald D. Schrimpf; Brian D. Sierawski; Lloyd W. Massengill; Paul E. Dodd; M.R. Shaneyfelt; J. A. Felix; J.R. Schwank; Nadim F. Haddad; Reed K. Lawrence; James H. Bowman; R. Conde

Experimental evidence and Monte-Carlo simulations for several technologies show that accurate SEE response predictions depend on a detailed description of the variability of radiation events (e.g., nuclear reactions), as opposed to the classical single-valued LET parameter. Rate predictions conducted with this simulation framework exhibit excellent agreement with the average observed SEU rate on NASAs MESSENGER mission to Mercury, while a prediction from the traditional IRPP method, which does not include the contribution from ion-ion reactions, falls well below the observed rate. While rate predictions depend on availability of technology information, the approach described here is sufficiently flexible that reasonably accurate results describing the response to irradiation can be obtained even in the absence of detailed information about the device geometry and fabrication process.


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 2005

Role of heavy-ion nuclear reactions in determining on-orbit single event error rates

Christina L. Howe; Robert A. Weller; Robert A. Reed; Marcus H. Mendenhall; Ronald D. Schrimpf; Kevin M. Warren; Dennis R. Ball; Lloyd W. Massengill; Kenneth A. LaBel; J.W. Howard; Nadim F. Haddad

Simulations show that neglecting ion-ion interaction processes (both particles having Z>1) results in an underestimation of the total on-orbit single event upset error rate by more than two orders of magnitude for certain technologies. The inclusion of ion-ion nuclear reactions leads to dramatically different SEU error rates for CMOS devices containing high Z materials compared with direct ionization by the primary ion alone. Device geometry and material composition have a dramatic effect on charge deposition in small sensitive volumes for the spectrum of ion energies found in space, compared with the limited range of energies typical of ground tests.


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 2010

Muon-Induced Single Event Upsets in Deep-Submicron Technology

Brian D. Sierawski; Marcus H. Mendenhall; Robert A. Reed; Michael Andrew Clemens; Robert A. Weller; Ronald D. Schrimpf; Ewart W. Blackmore; M. Trinczek; B. Hitti; Jonathan A. Pellish; Robert C. Baumann; Shi-Jie Wen; R. Wong; Nelson Tam

Experimental data are presented that show low-energy muons are able to cause single event upsets in 65 nm, 45 nm, and 40 nm CMOS SRAMs. Energy deposition measurements using a surface barrier detector are presented to characterize the kinetic energy spectra produced by the M20B surface muon beam at TRIUMF. A Geant4 application is used to simulate the beam and estimate the energy spectra incident on the memories. Results indicate that the sensitivity to this mechanism will increase for scaled technologies.


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 2007

Application of RADSAFE to Model the Single Event Upset Response of a 0.25

Kevin M. Warren; Robert A. Weller; Brian D. Sierawski; Robert A. Reed; Marcus H. Mendenhall; Ronald D. Schrimpf; Lloyd W. Massengill; Mark Porter; Jeffrey D. Wilkinson; Kenneth A. LaBel; J. Adams

The RADSAFE simulation framework is described and applied to model SEU in a 0.25 mum CMOS 4 Mbit SRAM. For this circuit, the RADSAFE approach produces trends similar to those expected from classical rectangular parallelepiped models, but more closely represents the physical mechanisms responsible for SEU in the SRAM circuit.


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 2007

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Kevin M. Warren; Brian D. Sierawski; Robert A. Reed; Robert A. Weller; Carl Carmichael; Austin H. Lesea; Marcus H. Mendenhall; Paul E. Dodd; Ronald D. Schrimpf; Lloyd W. Massengill; Tan Hoang; Hsing Wan; J. L. De Jong; Rick Padovani; Joe J. Fabula

Heavy ion cross section data taken from a hardened-by-design circuit are presented which deviate from the traditional single sensitive volume or classical rectangular parallelepiped model of single event upset. TCAD and SPICE analysis demonstrate a SEU mechanism dominated by multiple node charge collection. Monte Carlo simulation is used to model the response and predict an on-orbit error rate.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section B-beam Interactions With Materials and Atoms | 2005

m CMOS SRAM

Marcus H. Mendenhall; Robert A. Weller

Abstract An algorithm has been developed for the G eant 4 Monte-Carlo package for the efficient computation of screened Coulomb interatomic scattering. It explicitly integrates the classical equations of motion for scattering events, resulting in precise tracking of both the projectile and the recoil target nucleus. The algorithm permits the user to plug in an arbitrary screening function, such as Lens–Jensen screening, which is good for backscattering calculations, or Ziegler–Biersack–Littmark screening, which is good for nuclear straggling and implantation problems. This will allow many of the applications of the TRIM and SRIM codes to be extended into the much more general G eant 4 framework where nuclear and other effects can be included.

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Albert Henins

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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