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J.R. Srour

Bio: J.R. Srour is an academic researcher. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications receiving 554 citations.

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TL;DR: A historical review of the literature on the effects of radiation-induced displacement damage in semiconductor materials and devices to provide a guide to displacement damage literature and to offer critical comments regarding that literature in an attempt to identify key findings.
Abstract: This paper provides a historical review of the literature on the effects of radiation-induced displacement damage in semiconductor materials and devices. Emphasis is placed on effects in technologically important bulk silicon and silicon devices. The primary goals are to provide a guide to displacement damage literature, to offer critical comments regarding that literature in an attempt to identify key findings, to describe how the understanding of displacement damage mechanisms and effects has evolved, and to note current trends. Selected tutorial elements are included as an aid to presenting the review information more clearly and to provide a frame of reference for the terminology used. The primary approach employed is to present information qualitatively while leaving quantitative details to the cited references. A bibliography of key displacement-damage information sources is also provided.

607 citations


Cited by
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M. Auvergne1, P. Bodin2, L. Boisnard2, J.-T. Buey1, S. Chaintreuil1, G. Epstein1, M. Jouret2, T. Lam-Trong2, P. Levacher, A. Magnan, R. Perez2, P. Plasson1, J.-Y. Plesseria, Gisbert Peter, M. Steller3, D. Tiphène1, A. Baglin1, P. Agogué2, Thierry Appourchaux4, D. Barbet4, T. Beaufort5, R. Bellenger1, R. Berlin, P. Bernardi1, D. Blouin, Patrick Boumier4, F. Bonneau2, R. Briet2, B. Butler5, R. Cautain, F. Chiavassa2, V. Costes2, J. Cuvilho, V. Cunha-Parro1, F. De Oliveira Fialho1, M. Decaudin4, J.-M. Defise, S. Djalal2, A. Docclo1, R. Drummond6, O. Dupuis1, G. Exil1, C. Fauré2, A. Gaboriaud2, P. Gamet2, P. Gavalda2, E. Grolleau1, L. Gueguen1, V. Guivarc'h1, P. Guterman, J. Hasiba3, G. Huntzinger1, H. Hustaix2, C. Imbert2, G. Jeanville1, B. Johlander5, Laurent Jorda, P. Journoud1, F. Karioty1, L. Kerjean2, L. Lafond2, V. Lapeyrere1, P. Landiech2, T. Larqué2, P. Laudet2, J. Le Merrer, L. Leporati, B. Leruyet1, B. Levieuge1, Antoine Llebaria, L. Martin, E. Mazy, J.-M. Mesnager2, J.-P. Michel1, J.-P. Moalic4, W. Monjoin1, D. Naudet1, S. Neukirchner3, K. Nguyen-Kim4, Marc Ollivier4, J.-L. Orcesi4, H. Ottacher3, A. Oulali1, J. Parisot1, S. Perruchot, A. Piacentino1, L. Pinheiro da Silva1, J. Platzer1, B. Pontet2, A. Pradines2, Céline Quentin, U. Rohbeck, G. Rolland2, F. Rollenhagen, R. Romagnan1, N. Russ, R. Samadi1, R. Schmidt1, N. Schwartz1, I. Sebbag2, H. Smit5, W. Sunter5, M. Tello2, P. Toulouse2, B. Ulmer, O. Vandermarcq2, E. Vergnault2, R. Wallner3, G. Waultier, P. Zanatta1 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a complete overview of the instrument and platform behavior for all environmental conditions for CoRoT, and show that the performance specifications are easily satisfied when the environmental conditions are favorable.
Abstract: Context. CoRoT is a space telescope dedicated to stellar seismology and the search for extrasolar planets. The mission is led by the CNES in association with French laboratories and has a large international participation. The European Space Agency (ESA), Austria, Belgium, and Germany contribute to the payload, and Spain and Brazil contribute to the ground segment. Development of the spacecraft, which is based on a PROTEUS low earth orbit (LEO) recurrent platform, commenced in October 2000, and the satellite was launched on December 27, 2006. Aims. The instrument and platform characteristics prior to launch have been described in ESA publication (SP-1306). In the present paper we explain the behaviour in flight, based on raw and corrected data. Methods. Five runs have been completed since January 2007. The data used here are essentially those acquired during the commissioning phase and from a long run that lasted 146 days. These enable us to give a complete overview of the instrument and platform behaviour for all environmental conditions. The ground based data processing is not described in detail because the most important method has been published elsewhere. Results. We show that the performance specifications are easily satisfied when the environmental conditions are favourable. Most of the perturbations, hence data corrections, are related to LEO perturbations: high energy particles inside the South Atlantic Anomaly (SAA), eclipses and temperature variations, and line of sight fluctuations due to the attitude control system. Straylight due to the reflected light from the earth, which is controlled by the telescope and baffle design, appears to be negligible.

781 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the radiation resistance of GaN-based blue light emitting diodes (LEDs) to different types of ionizing radiation, and the role of existing defects in GaN are discussed.
Abstract: GalliumNitridebasedhighelectronmobilitytransistors(HEMTs)areattractiveforuseinhighpowerandhighfrequencyapplications, with higher breakdown voltages and two dimensional electron gas (2DEG) density compared to their GaAs counterparts. Specific applications for nitride HEMTs include air, land and satellite based communications and phased array radar. Highly efficient GaNbased blue light emitting diodes (LEDs) employ AlGaN and InGaN alloys with different compositions integrated into heterojunctions and quantum wells. The realization of these blue LEDs has led to white light sources, in which a blue LED is used to excite a phosphor material; light is then emitted in the yellow spectral range, which, combined with the blue light, appears as white. Alternatively, multiple LEDs of red, green and blue can be used together. Both of these technologies are used in high-efficiency white electroluminescent light sources. These light sources are efficient and long-lived and are therefore replacing incandescent and fluorescent lamps for general lighting purposes. Since lighting represents 20‐30% of electrical energy consumption, and because GaN white light LEDs require ten times less energy than ordinary light bulbs, the use of efficient blue LEDs leads to significant energy savings. GaN-based devices are more radiation hard than their Si and GaAs counterparts due to the high bond strength in III-nitride materials. The response of GaN to radiation damage is a function of radiation type, dose and energy, as well as the carrier density, impurity content and dislocation density in the GaN. The latter can act as sinks for created defects and parameters such as the carrier removal rate due to trapping of carriers into radiation-induced defects depends on the crystal growth method used to grow the GaN layers. The growth method has a clear effect on radiation response beyond the carrier type and radiation source. We review data on the radiation resistance of AlGaN/GaN and InAlN/GaN HEMTs and GaN‐based LEDs to different types of ionizing radiation, and discuss ion stopping mechanisms. The primary energy levels introduced by different forms of radiation, carrier removal rates and role of existing defects in GaN are discussed. The carrier removal rates are a function of initial carrier concentration and dose but not of dose rate or hydrogen concentration in the nitride material grown by Metal Organic Chemical Vapor Deposition. Proton and electron irradiation damage in HEMTs creates positive threshold voltage shifts due to a decrease in the two dimensional electron gas concentration resulting from electron trapping at defect sites, as well as a decrease in carrier mobility and degradation of drain current and transconductance. State-of-art simulators now provide accurate predictions for the observed changes in radiation-damaged HEMT performance. Neutron irradiation creates more extended damage regions and at high doses leads to Fermi level pinning while 60 Co γ-ray irradiation leads to much smaller changes in HEMT drain current relative to the other forms of radiation. In InGaN/GaN blue LEDs irradiated with protons at fluences near 10 14 cm −2 or electrons at fluences near 10 16 cm −2 , both current-voltage and light output-current characteristics are degraded with increasing proton dose. The optical performance of the LEDs is more sensitive to the proton or electron irradiation than that of the corresponding electrical performances. © The Author(s) 2015. Published by ECS. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License (CC BY, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse of the work in any

235 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review of radiation-induced displacement damage effects in semiconductor devices is presented in this paper, with emphasis placed on silicon technology, including effects produced in silicon particle detectors, visible imaging arrays, and solar cells.
Abstract: A review of radiation-induced displacement damage effects in semiconductor devices is presented, with emphasis placed on silicon technology. The history of displacement damage studies is summarized, and damage production mechanisms are discussed. Properties of defect clusters and isolated defects are addressed. Displacement damage effects in materials and devices are considered, including effects produced in silicon particle detectors, visible imaging arrays, and solar cells. Additional topics examined include NIEL scaling, carrier concentration changes, random telegraph signals, radiation hardness assurance, and simulation methods for displacement damage. Areas needing further study are noted.

176 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review of the effects of proton, neutron, γ-ray, and electron irradiation on GaN materials and devices is presented in this paper, showing that GaN is several orders of magnitude more resistant to radiation damage than GaAs of similar doping concentrations.
Abstract: A review of the effects of proton, neutron, γ-ray, and electron irradiation on GaN materials and devices is presented. Neutron irradiation tends to create disordered regions in the GaN, while the damage from the other forms of radiation is more typically point defects. In all cases, the damaged region contains carrier traps that reduce the mobility and conductivity of the GaN and at high enough doses, a significant degradation of device performance. GaN is several orders of magnitude more resistant to radiation damage than GaAs of similar doping concentrations. In terms of heterostructures, preliminary data suggests that the radiation hardness decreases in the order AlN/GaN > AlGaN/GaN > InAlN/GaN, consistent with the average bond strengths in the Al-based materials.

175 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the rates of chemical transformation by radiation damage of polystyrene (PS), poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA), and fibrinogen (Fg) have been measured quantitatively using synchrotron radiation.

169 citations