Sciweavers

GECCO
2004
Springer

High Temperature Experiments for Circuit Self-Recovery

14 years 5 months ago
High Temperature Experiments for Circuit Self-Recovery
Temperature and radiation tolerant electronics, as well as long life survivability are key capabilities required for future NASA missions. Current approaches to electronics for extreme environments focus on component level robustness and hardening. Compensation techniques such as bias cancellation circuitry have also been employed. However, current technology can only ensure very limited lifetime in extreme environments. This paper presents a novel approach, based on evolvable hardware technology, which allows adaptive in-situ circuit redesign/reconfiguration during operation in extreme environments. This technology would complement material/device advancements and increase the mission capability to survive harsh environments. The approach is demonstrated on a mixed-signal programmable chip, which recovers functionality until 280o C. We show in this paper the functionality recovery at high temperatures for a variety of circuits, including rectifiers, amplifiers and filters.
Didier Keymeulen, Ricardo Salem Zebulum, Vu Duong,
Added 01 Jul 2010
Updated 01 Jul 2010
Type Conference
Year 2004
Where GECCO
Authors Didier Keymeulen, Ricardo Salem Zebulum, Vu Duong, Xin Guo, Ian Ferguson, Adrian Stoica
Comments (0)