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Investigation of Cryogenic Aging in 28 nm CMOS: Suppression of BTI and HCD in Circuits and SRAM

 
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cris.virtual.orcid0000-0002-5847-3949
cris.virtual.orcid0000-0002-8186-071X
cris.virtual.orcid0000-0002-4609-5573
cris.virtual.orcid0000-0003-1615-1033
cris.virtual.orcid0000-0002-1484-4007
cris.virtualsource.department037e6881-9aff-485e-9d58-d5383949642f
cris.virtualsource.department0328af28-0868-452b-9c77-facda8733c82
cris.virtualsource.department8b84673b-878f-4c3b-959d-b7cdae2d70d9
cris.virtualsource.departmentf5422aad-241b-410a-a7b7-28bf124c06e0
cris.virtualsource.department812f2909-a81b-4593-9b32-75331cffa35c
cris.virtualsource.orcid037e6881-9aff-485e-9d58-d5383949642f
cris.virtualsource.orcid0328af28-0868-452b-9c77-facda8733c82
cris.virtualsource.orcid8b84673b-878f-4c3b-959d-b7cdae2d70d9
cris.virtualsource.orcidf5422aad-241b-410a-a7b7-28bf124c06e0
cris.virtualsource.orcid812f2909-a81b-4593-9b32-75331cffa35c
dc.contributor.authorDiaz Fortuny, Javier
dc.contributor.authorBenkhelifa, Mahdi
dc.contributor.authorGrill, Alexander
dc.contributor.authorBury, Erik
dc.contributor.authorDegraeve, Robin
dc.contributor.authorKaczer, Ben
dc.contributor.authorAmrouch, Hussam
dc.date.accessioned2026-03-30T14:33:46Z
dc.date.available2026-03-30T14:33:46Z
dc.date.createdwos2025-10-18
dc.date.issued2025
dc.description.abstractThe increasing interest in cryogenic circuits is driven by their transformative potential across high-performance computing, medical devices, space exploration, and quantum technologies. Operating transistors at cryogenic temperatures, such as 77 K and below, yields substantial improvements, including increased ON current, reduced OFF current, and enhanced sub-threshold slope, paving the way for significant gains in efficiency. While recent studies have explored device-level reliability at cryogenic temperatures, circuit-level reliability-particularly under bias temperature instability (BTI) and hot carrier degradation (HCD)-remains underexamined, leaving critical aging mechanisms at these temperatures poorly understood. To bridge this gap, we designed and fabricated a fully customized chip in a commercial 28 nm technology. The chip integrates diverse ring oscillator (RO) circuits for precise characterization of BTI and HCD aging effects, enabling evaluation of their impact on performance at cryogenic temperatures as low as 4 K. This work ensures that as cryogenic CMOS technologies drive innovation in critical applications, their reliability is comprehensively understood and advanced.
dc.description.wosFundingTextThis work was supported in part by the CyberSecurity Research Flanders with reference number VR20192203 and by the German Research Foundation (DFG) under grant AM 534/5-1 (NN-Thunder, project: 506419033).
dc.identifier.doi10.1109/IRPS48204.2025.10982796
dc.identifier.isbn979-8-3315-0478-6
dc.identifier.issn1541-7026
dc.identifier.urihttps://imec-publications.be/handle/20.500.12860/58963
dc.language.isoeng
dc.provenance.editstepusergreet.vanhoof@imec.be
dc.publisherIEEE
dc.source.conferenceIEEE International Reliability Physics Symposium (IRPS)
dc.source.conferencedate2025-03-30
dc.source.conferencelocationMonterey
dc.source.journal2025 IEEE INTERNATIONAL RELIABILITY PHYSICS SYMPOSIUM, IRPS
dc.source.numberofpages7
dc.title

Investigation of Cryogenic Aging in 28 nm CMOS: Suppression of BTI and HCD in Circuits and SRAM

dc.typeProceedings paper
dspace.entity.typePublication
imec.internal.crawledAt2025-10-22
imec.internal.sourcecrawler
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