Single-Event Burnout (SEB) is one of the most critical failure mechanisms in silicon power MOSFETs operating in radiation environments, particularly under heavy-ion irradiation, and often limits device operation through excessive voltage derating. In this work, SEB robustness of a silicon VDMOS power device is investigated using detailed electro-thermal transient simulations. The study evaluates two complementary device-level modifications: the introduction of a buffer layer between the epitaxial layer and the substrate, which has been reported in the past, and a new approach considering the incorporation of a novel highly doped boron BOX implant within the P-body region. Heavy-ion impacts are simulated using a physically based model implemented in SENTAURUS TCAD, accounting for ion energy deposition, impact position, and thermal effects. The results show that the buffer layer increases the second breakdown voltage and can suppress high-current operating points, while the BOX implant raises the parasitic BJT activation threshold by reducing the P-body resistance. When combined, both modifications lead to a significant reduction in the peak temperature reached during after-impact transients, without introducing measurable degradation of static electrical characteristics. These results demonstrate that combining buffer layer engineering with localized P-body resistance reduction is an effective strategy to improve SEB robustness in silicon VDMOS power devices without relying on excessive derating.
Rodrigo et al. (Fri,) studied this question.