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Dive into the research topics where Stanley D. Phillips is active.

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Featured researches published by Stanley D. Phillips.


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 2008

Laser-Induced Current Transients in Silicon-Germanium HBTs

Jonathan A. Pellish; Robert A. Reed; Dale McMorrow; Joseph S. Melinger; Phillip P. Jenkins; Akil K. Sutton; Ryan M. Diestelhorst; Stanley D. Phillips; John D. Cressler; Vincent Pouget; Nicholas D. Pate; John A. Kozub; Marcus H. Mendenhall; Robert A. Weller; Ronald D. Schrimpf; Paul W. Marshall; Alan D. Tipton; Guofu Niu

Device-level current transients are induced by injecting carriers using two-photon absorption from a subbandgap pulsed laser and recorded using wideband transmission and measurement equipment. These transients exhibit three distinct temporal trends that depend on laser pulse energy as well as the transverse and vertical charge generation location. The nature of the current transient is controlled by both the behavior of the subcollector-substrate junction and isolation biasing. However, substrate potential modulation, due to deformation of the subcollector-substrate depletion region, is the dominant mechanism affecting transient characteristics.


IEEE Electron Device Letters | 2009

Sub-1-K Operation of SiGe Transistors and Circuits

Laleh Najafizadeh; Joseph S. Adams; Stanley D. Phillips; Kurt A. Moen; John D. Cressler; Shahid Aslam; Thomas R. Stevenson; Robert M. Meloy

We present the first measurement results for silicon-germanium (SiGe) heterojunction bipolar transistors (HBTs) and SiGe BiCMOS circuits operating in the sub-1-K regime. Robust transistor operation of a first-generation 0.5 times 2.5 times 4-mum2 SiGe transistor is demonstrated at package temperatures as low as 300 mK. In addition, a SiGe BiCMOS bandgap voltage reference is verified to be fully functional at operating temperatures below 700 mK. The SiGe voltage reference exhibits a temperature coefficient of 160 ppm/degC over the temperature range of 700 mK-300 K.


radiation effects data workshop | 2012

Total Dose and Transient Response of SiGe HBTs from a New 4th-Generation, 90 nm SiGe BiCMOS Technology

Nelson E. Lourenco; Robert L. Schmid; Kurt A. Moen; Stanley D. Phillips; Troy D. England; John D. Cressler; John J. Pekarik; James W. Adkisson; Renata Camillo-Castillo; Peng Cheng; John Ellis Monaghan; Peter B. Gray; David L. Harame; Marwan H. Khater; Qizhi Liu; Aaron L. Vallett; Bjorn Zetterlund; Vibhor Jain; Vikas K. Kaushal

The total ionizing dose and laser-induced transient response of a new 4th generation 90 nm IBM SiGe 9HP technology are investigated. Total dose testing was performed with 63.3 MeV protons at the Crocker Nuclear Laboratory at the University of California, Davis. Transient testing was performed on the two-photon absorption system at Naval Research Laboratory. Results show that the SiGe HBTs are dose-tolerant up to 3 Mrad(SiO2) and exhibit reduced single event transients compared to earlier SiGe generations.


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 2009

A Novel Device Architecture for SEU Mitigation: The Inverse-Mode Cascode SiGe HBT

Stanley D. Phillips; Tushar K. Thrivikraman; Aravind Appaswamy; Akil K. Sutton; John D. Cressler; Gyorgy Vizkelethy; Paul E. Dodd; Robert A. Reed

We investigate, for the first time, the potential for SEE mitigation of a newly-developed device architecture in a 3rd generation high-speed SiGe platform. This new device architecture is termed the ¿inverse-mode cascode SiGe HBT¿ and is comprised of two standard devices sharing a buried subcollector and operated in a cascode configuration. Verification of the TID immunity is demonstrated using 10 keV X-rays, while an investigation of the SEE susceptibility is performed using a 36 MeV 16O ion. IBICC results show strong sensitivities to device bias with only marginal improvement when compared to a standard device; however, by providing a conductive path from the buried subcollector (C-Tap) to a voltage potential, almost all collected charge is induced on the C-Tap terminal instead of the collector terminal. These results are confirmed using full 3-D TCAD simulations which also provides insight into the physics of this new RHBD device architecture. The implications of biasing the C-Tap terminal in a circuit context are also addressed.


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 2010

Design of Digital Circuits Using Inverse-Mode Cascode SiGe HBTs for Single Event Upset Mitigation

Tushar K. Thrivikraman; Edward P. Wilcox; Stanley D. Phillips; John D. Cressler; Cheryl J. Marshall; Gyorgy Vizkelethy; Paul E. Dodd; Paul W. Marshall

We report on the design and measured results of a new SiGe HBT radiation hardening by design technique called the “inverse-mode cascode” (IMC). A third-generation SiGe HBT IMC device was tested in a time resolved ion beam induced charge collection (TRIBICC) system, and was found to have over a 75% reduction in peak current transients with the use of an n-Tiedown on the IMC sub-collector node. Digital shift registers in a 1st-generation SiGe HBT technology were designed and measured under a heavy-ion beam, and shown to increase the LET threshold over standard npn only shift registers. Using the CREME96 tool, the expected orbital bit-errors/day were simulated to be approximately 70% lower with the IMC shift register. These measured results help demonstrate the efficacy of using the IMC device as a low-cost means for improving the SEE radiation hardness of SiGe HBT technology without increasing area or power.


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 2012

Single-Event Response of the SiGe HBT Operating in Inverse-Mode

Stanley D. Phillips; Kurt A. Moen; Nelson E. Lourenco; John D. Cressler

The single-event effect sensitivity of inverse-mode biased SiGe HBTs in both bulk and SOI technology platforms are investigated, for the first time, using digital circuits and stand-alone device test structures. Comparisons of heavy-ion broad beam data of shift register circuits constructed with forward-mode and inverse-mode biased SiGe HBTs from a first-generation, complementary SOI SiGe BiCMOS process, reveal an improvement in SEU mitigation for the inverse-mode shift register architecture. Full 3D TCAD simulations highlight the differences in transient current origination between forward and inverse-mode biased devices, illustrating the impact of doping profiles on ion-induced shunt duration. To extend the analysis to a bulk platform, new fourth-generation npn , SiGe HBTs were biased in both the forward and inverse-mode and irradiated at NRL using the two photon absorption measurement system. These measurements support the analysis of transient origination using 3D TCAD simulations. Furthermore, the isolation of the output terminal from the sensitive subcollector-substrate junction is experimentally demonstrated for the inverse-mode bias. Fully coupled mixed-mode simulations predict a significant reduction in sensitive area for inverse-mode shift registers built in a bulk SiGe platform.


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 2010

A Theory of Single-Event Transient Response in Cross-Coupled Negative Resistance Oscillators

Stephen Horst; Stanley D. Phillips; Prabir K. Saha; John D. Cressler; Dale McMorrow; Paul W. Marshall

A theory of the circuit-based response to SET phenomena in resonant tank oscillators is presented. Transients are shown to be caused by a change in the voltage state of the circuits characteristic differential equation. The SET amplitude and phase response is derived for arbitrary strike waveforms and shown to be time-variant based on the strike time relative to the period of oscillation. Measurements in the time-domain are used to support the theory, while the frequency-domain is used to gauge potential impact on system performance. A design-oriented analysis of the relevant trade-offs is also presented.


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 2013

An Investigation of Single-Event Effects and Potential SEU Mitigation Strategies in Fourth-Generation, 90 nm SiGe BiCMOS

Nelson E. Lourenco; Stanley D. Phillips; Troy D. England; Adilson S. Cardoso; Zachary E. Fleetwood; Kurt A. Moen; Dale McMorrow; Jeffrey H. Warner; Stephen Buchner; Pauline Paki-Amouzou; Jack Pekarik; David L. Harame; Ashok Raman; Marek Turowski; John D. Cressler

The single-event effect sensitivity of fourth-generation, 90 nm SiGe HBTs is investigated. Inverse-mode, ≥1.0 Gbps SiGe digital logic using standard, unoptimized, fourth-generation SiGe HBTs is demonstrated and the inverse-mode shift register exhibited a reduction in bit-error cross section across all ion-strike LETs. Ion-strike simulations on dc calibrated, 3-D TCAD SiGe HBT models show a reduction in peak current transient magnitude and a reduction in overall transient duration for bulk SiGe HBTs operating in inverse mode. These improvements in device-level SETs are attributed to the electrical isolation of the physical emitter from the subcollector-substrate junction and the high doping in the SiGe HBT base and emitter, suggesting that SiGe BiCMOS technology scaling will drive further improvements in inverse-mode device and circuit-level SEE. Two-photon absorption experiments at NRL support the transient mechanisms described in the device-level TCAD simulations. Fully-coupled mixed-mode simulations predict large improvements in circuit-level SEU for inverse-mode SiGe HBTs in multi-Gbps, inverse-mode digital logic.


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 2009

Junction Isolation Single Event Radiation Hardening of a 200 GHz SiGe:C HBT Technology Without Deep Trench Isolation

Ryan M. Diestelhorst; Stanley D. Phillips; Aravind Appaswamy; Akil K. Sutton; John D. Cressler; Jonathan A. Pellish; Robert A. Reed; Gyorgy Vizkelethy; Paul W. Marshall; Hans Gustat; Bernd Heinemann; Gerhard G. Fischer; Dieter Knoll; Bernd Tillack

We investigate a novel implementation of junction isolation to harden a 200 GHz SiGe:C HBT technology without deep trench isolation against single event effects. The inclusion of isolation is shown to have no effect on the dc or ac performance of the nominal device, and likewise does not reduce the HBTs inherent tolerance to TID radiation exposure on the order of a Mrad. A 69% reduction in total integrated charge collection across a slice through the center of the device was achieved. In addition, a 26% reduction in collected charge is reported for strikes to the center of the emitter. 3-D NanoTCAD simulations are performed on RHBD and control device models yielding a good match to measured results for strikes from the emitter center to 8 ¿m away. This result represents one of the most effective transistor layout-level RHBD approaches demonstrated to date in SiGe.


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 2014

Evaluation of Enhanced Low Dose Rate Sensitivity in Fourth-Generation SiGe HBTs

Zachary E. Fleetwood; Adilson S. Cardoso; Ickhyun Song; Edward P. Wilcox; Nelson E. Lourenco; Stanley D. Phillips; Rajan Arora; Pauline Paki-Amouzou; John D. Cressler

The total ionizing dose response of 4th-generation SiGe HBTs is assessed at both low and high dose rates to evaluate enhanced low dose rate sensitivity (ELDRS) in a new SiGe BiCMOS technology. Both device and circuit results are presented. A bandgap reference circuit topology is chosen to monitor for ELDRS in TID-induced collector current shifts, which have previously been reported in low dose rate studies of SiGe HBTs. The results in this paper also cover previous technology generations from this foundry in order to incorporate a broader view of dose rate effects in SiGe HBTs. No indication of ELDRS was found in any technology generation.

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John D. Cressler

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Paul W. Marshall

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Gyorgy Vizkelethy

Sandia National Laboratories

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Kurt A. Moen

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Dale McMorrow

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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Edward P. Wilcox

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Paul E. Dodd

Sandia National Laboratories

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Ryan M. Diestelhorst

Georgia Institute of Technology

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