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5962R0050101V9A

Description
Two Terminal Voltage Reference, 1 Output, 2.5V, Trim/Adjustable, MBCY3, HERMETIC SEALED, TO-46, 3 PIN
CategoryPower/power management    The power supply circuit   
File Size142KB,4 Pages
ManufacturerDefense Logistics Agency
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5962R0050101V9A Overview

Two Terminal Voltage Reference, 1 Output, 2.5V, Trim/Adjustable, MBCY3, HERMETIC SEALED, TO-46, 3 PIN

5962R0050101V9A Parametric

Parameter NameAttribute value
MakerDefense Logistics Agency
Parts packaging codeTO-46
package instruction,
Contacts3
Reach Compliance Codeunknow
ECCN codeEAR99
Analog Integrated Circuits - Other TypesTWO TERMINAL VOLTAGE REFERENCE
JESD-30 codeO-MBCY-W3
Number of functions1
Output times1
Number of terminals3
Maximum operating temperature125 °C
Minimum operating temperature-55 °C
Maximum output voltage2.515 V
Minimum output voltage2.465 V
Nominal output voltage2.5 V
Package body materialMETAL
Package shapeROUND
Package formCYLINDRICAL
Certification statusQualified
Filter levelMIL-PRF-38535 Class V
surface mountNO
Maximum voltage temperature coefficient888 ppm/°C
Temperature levelMILITARY
Terminal formWIRE
Terminal locationBOTTOM
total dose100k Rad(Si) V
Fine-tuning/adjustable outputYES
Application Note
SLVK047 – May 2020
Single-Event Effects (SEE) Confidence Interval
Calculations
ABSTRACT
This application note describes the methodology used to calculate confidence intervals for radiation-
hardened devices that exhibit few or zero radiation-induced events.
Contents
1
2
Introduction
...................................................................................................................
1
References
...................................................................................................................
3
List of Tables
1
Experimental Example Calculation of Mean-Fluence-to-Failure (MFTF) and,
σ
Using a 95% Confidence
Interval
........................................................................................................................
2
1
Introduction
Determining the SEE cross-section of robustly radiation-hardened devices becomes more difficult since
often few, or possibly even no events are observed during an entire exposure. Determining the cross-
section using an average event rate with standard deviation is no longer a viable option, and the common
practice of assuming a single error occurred at the conclusion of a null-result can end up in a greatly
underestimated cross-section.
In cases where observed events are rare or non-existent, the use of confidence intervals and the Chi-
Squared distribution is indicated. The Chi-Squared distribution is particularly well-suited for determining a
reliability level when the events occur at a constant rate. In the case of SEE testing where the ion events
are random in time and position within the irradiation area, it is expected that the event rate is independent
of time (presuming that parametric shifts induced by the total ionizing dose do not affect the failure rate),
so the use of Chi-Squared statistical techniques is valid (since events are rare an exponential or Poisson
distribution is usually used).
In a typical SEE experiment, the device-under-test (DUT) is exposed to a known, fixed fluence (ions/cm
2
)
while the DUT is monitored for events. This is analogous to fixed-time reliability testing and, more
specifically, time-terminated testing, where the reliability test is terminated after a fixed amount of time
whether or not a failure has occurred (in the case of SEE tests, fluence is substituted for time and hence it
is a fixed fluence test) [1]. Calculating a confidence interval specifically provides a range of values which is
likely to contain the parameter of interest (the actual number of events/fluence). Confidence intervals are
constructed at a specific confidence level. For example, a 95% confidence level implies that if a given
number of units was sampled numerous times and a confidence interval was estimated for each test, the
resulting set of confidence intervals would bracket the true population parameter in about 95% of the
cases.
To estimate the cross-section from a null-result (no events observed for a given fluence) with a confidence
interval, start with the standard reliability determination of lower-bound (minimum) mean-time-to-failure for
fixed-time testing (an exponential distribution is assumed):
SLVK047 – May 2020
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Single-Event Effects Confidence Interval Calculations
Copyright © 2020, Texas Instruments Incorporated
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