Written by: Jim Steele August 1, 2022 Dr. Biswajit Ray, right, with students (from left) Matchima Buddhanoy, Sijay Huang, Umeshwarnath Surendranathan and Mondol Anik Kumar in the Ray Research Group lab. Michael Mercier / UAH A new method of radiation-resistant computer data storage called watermark storage that鈥檚 been developed by a University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH) professor leading a student team has direct applications in the nuclear power and space industries. 鈥淒ata-driven analytics are growing exponentially for space and nuclear environments,鈥 says Dr. Biswajit Ray, an assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at UAH, a part of the University of Alabama System. He says the new storage system doesn鈥檛 rely on an electronic charge for NAND flash storage, as traditional data drives do. NAND stands for the 鈥渘ot and鈥 type of flash memory, which is in common use. Interestingly, the watermark storage method requires no new components. 鈥淲e adeptly use the breakdown mechanism of a transistor鈥檚 oxide layer to imprint information on the same commercial off-the-shelf memory cells,鈥 Dr. Ray says. 鈥淭his technique is more resistant to irradiation damage compared to the traditional charge-based technique.鈥 He鈥檚 been working with Kannan Grant, director of UAH鈥檚 Office of Technology Commercialization, on a pending patent for the new technology. Radiation tolerance is typically characterized as cumulative total dose, as expressed in units of rad(Si). So, how radiation tolerant is watermark data storage? 鈥淲e have tested the chips up to 100 krad(Si) and we find clear benefits using our method compared to the traditional charge based method,鈥 Dr. Ray says. Just one krad is 1,000 rads, a strong enough radiation dose to kill a person. 鈥淥ur method shows a linear response of the bit error rate with a total dose, whereas the traditional method shows an exponential rise,鈥 he says. While much less data is lost in radioactive environments with the watermark technique, there is a downside. Data writing time is slower than traditional electronic storage, but Dr. Ray says that some of that downside can be minimized if NAND chip manufacturers allow a few additional operations on their chips. 鈥淲riting time for traditional NAND flash media is roughly a few milliseconds per 16kB page, whereas imprinting time in our proposal will be a few seconds,鈥 he says. 鈥淪o, data writing time will increase by about 1,000 times. However, the proposed technique targets those applications where writing will be done only once and hence it will not be a significant bottleneck.鈥 Dr. Ray鈥檚 electrical and computer engineering student team members in the , and the co-authors of the resulting , are Matchima Buddhanoy, a doctoral student and the lead author; Sadman Sakib, a recent doctoral graduate now working at Intel; and Umeshwarnath Surendranathan, a doctoral student. Collaborators and co-authors are Dr. Aleksandar Milenkovi膰, a UAH professor of electrical and computer engineering, and Dr. Maryla Wasiolek and Dr. Khalid Hattar, principal members of the technical staff at Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque, N.M. Sandia provided support with Cobalt-60 gamma irradiation sources and helped conduct the experiments. The collaboration was contractually supported in part by the U.S. Department of Energy鈥檚 Office of Nuclear Energy through its Idaho Operations Office. Future research will be partially supported by Dr. Ray鈥檚 five-year, $650,000 National Science Foundation CAREER grant to create more resilient, durable and energy-efficient computer memory drives. The work will involve further radiation testing of the new technique, Dr. Ray says. We would like to explore and test this technique for a very high radiation environment such as a total dose of more than 1 megarad(Si),鈥 he says. 鈥淎t a very high total dose NAND peripheral circuits fail, making the chip non-functional. We plan to work with NAND manufacturers to build rad-hard NAND peripherals. We also plan to evaluate high-dose response by selective shielding of the peripherals.鈥 Learn More College of Engineering Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Office of Technology Commercialization Contact Dr. Biswajit Ray 256.824.5679 biswajit.ray@uah.edu Jim Steele 256.824.2772 jim.steele@uah.edu