Virtual Silicon Technology, Inc. and University of New Mexico announced today that they have completed the development and qualification of a revolutionary new semiconductor technology that will permit high complexity integrated circuits for space applications to be manufactured on commercial CMOS semiconductor processes.

The joint development was sponsored by NASA and supported by a consortium of participants from the aerospace industry. Virtual Silicon has exclusive, worldwide rights to further develop and market a series of advanced, radiation-tolerant ASIC libraries using patented techniques licensed by the University's Microelectronics Research Center (MRC).

The resulting standard cell design methodology allows much greater design complexity to be achieved while greatly reducing cost by eliminating the current requirement to fabricate parts on dedicated radiation hardened manufacturing processes.

"We are glad that to have partnered with Virtual Silicon in the development of this turnkey technology," said Dr. Gary Maki, director

of the Institute of Advanced Microelectronics at the University of Mexico. "Their expertise in advanced ASIC libraries and commitment to aggressively deploy the derived products assure our customers' success while protecting the valuable intellectual property rights of NASA, MRC, and our affiliates.

"Nearly four years of research have paid off for us and for

everyone interested in achieving higher levels of semiconductor design

complexity within costs that are more consistent with commercial

electronics for space applications."

"We are extremely pleased with the results of our joint efforts

with the MRC," said Michael Kliment, chief operating officer at

Virtual Silicon. "Together we've turned an exciting technology into

real products that enable our government as well as industrial

partners throughout the world to benefit from the many technical and

economic advantages available through use of modern CMOS semiconductor

technologies in space electronics design."

New Technology Offers Significant Benefits

Prior to this breakthrough, radiation-hardened components for

space flight applications were only available from a very limited

number of specialized foundries.

In addition to being very expensive to operate, these fabrication

sources tend to be several generations behind commercial CMOS

foundries, restricting designs to lower performance, higher power

consumption, and less density than otherwise achievable.

As the commercial demand for CMOS greatly exceeds the demand for

true rad-hard, there are fewer and fewer companies willing to invest

in these specialized fabs. In order to maintain its leadership in

space electronics, NASA has been researching ways to better use

mainstream semiconductor manufacturers.

Compared with radiation-hardened devices, radiation-tolerant

libraries offer space electronics designers a five to ten times

circuit density increase, higher performance at advanced processes

like 0.35- and 0.5-micron, and much lower manufacturing cost at

commercial foundries.

Comprehensive Qualification Process Demonstrates Impressive Results

Under MRC's leadership, several organizations contributed

specific expertise to the final development, qualification and

deployment of the radiation-tolerant library. Virtual Silicon

developed the Diplomat(tm)-RT standard cell library based on MRC's

patented radiation-tolerant technology.

MRC implemented 0.35- and 0.5-micron test chips with the library

and Hewlett Packard manufactured the chips via the MOSIS program. The

NASA Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC), and the Johnson Space Center

have provided overall systems design guidance, as well as library

qualification. Aerospace Corporation provided additional radiation

testing and qualification.

"The RT library is expected to be a significant microelectronics

enabler to create next generation flight electronics which is critical

for future satellite missions," said Warner Miller advanced

applications group leader at NASA, GSFC. "GSFC has overseen the

development of the RT technology and is utilizing the RT electronics

in current missions. It is beneficial to the government and aerospace

industry to have this technology available commercially."

The test chips were subjected to rigorous radiation testing at

the Brookhaven National Laboratory's single event upset test facility

(Tandem Van de-Graaff Accelerator). Both 0.35- and 0.5-micron versions

show very similar encouraging results. No single event latch-up nor

single event upset of storage elements were observed to an LET of 120

MeV/mg/cm2. Effective cross-section of clock edge coincident upsets

captured into storage elements were reduced by one order of magnitude.

The complete results of these tests will be presented at the 7th

NASA Symposium on VLSI Design, being hosted by the MRC at the

University of New Mexico, October 1-2, 1998. Virtual Silicon will

present additional information on the Diplomat-RT library and its

design environment at the symposium.

"We have successfully proven these layout and design techniques

in several test chips and in three full function, rad-tolerant VLSI

processors developed using full custom layout approaches," reported

Dr. Jody Gambles, overall project manager and recognized pioneer in

radiation-tolerant research. "Combining our experience with Virtual

Silicon's standard cell design expertise now means huge productivity

gains for our customers via modern ASIC design methodologies."

New Market Opportunities

"The consortium members are forecasting that the market for

sublicensing this advanced ASIC library could be $10M for each process

generation over the next three years," added Taylor Scanlon, president

and chief executive officer of Virtual Silicon Technology, Inc. "This

estimate covers the use of the standard cells only.

"There are many opportunities for Virtual Silicon and others to

provide additional physical design elements like memories and IP cores

for space electronics. This is another segment of the growing market

for application-specific, semiconductor intellectual property."

Guidance for the deployment of the technology is being provided

by The Center for Technology Commercialization located in Westboro,

MA. The licensing with the University of New Mexico has been

administered by the Science and Technology Corporation at UNM.

Initial Product Availability

Virtual Silicon has developed a full standard cell library that

will include design kits for Verilog, Vital, and Synopsys models. With

the front-end design kits, Virtual Silicon will then deploy complete

physical libraries fully interfaced with popular back-end design tools

like those from Cadence. Design kit and physical layout of the

0.5-micron Diplomat-RT50 libraries are now available. The 0.35-micron

Diplomat-RT35 library with more cell functionality will be available

in early 1999.

Meanwhile, MRC plans to establish one or more authorized design

centers to assist users in final layout of radiation-tolerant designs.

The authorized design centers will also provide a means for foreign

firms that might otherwise be restricted from licensing the physical

libraries to have their logical designs instantiated with the physical

layouts, and fabricated in the United States.

About the MRC at the University of New Mexico

The Microelectronics Research Center at the University of New

Mexico was chartered by NASA in 1995. Originated in 1986 as one of

eight national Space Engineering Research Centers (SERC) by NASA, the

Center today is the single research center for NASA whose goal is to

advance the use of VLSI circuits in space-bound electronics.

The Center conducts state-of-the-art research in the fields of

radiation-tolerant semiconductors, low power IC's, and high

performance electronic system design.

The Center has previously developed 25 VLSI chips for various

NASA missions, including the EDAC at the heart of the Solid State

Recorder installed in the Hubble Space Telescope during the February

97 STS-82 mission of the Space Shuttle Discovery.

The Center works in close cooperation with major electronics

companies to insure the transition of research to practical

implementation, and addresses specific national needs through

interaction with national research laboratories such as the Department

of Defense and the Department of Energy.

About Virtual Silicon

Virtual Silicon Technology develops, markets, and supports

Silicon Ready(tm) libraries, physical design components, and services

for complex integrated circuits in deep submicron semiconductor

process technologies.

The company provides application-specific, process-specific, and

foundry-portable versions of its Diplomat(tm) libraries and "hard" IP

to semiconductor manufacturers and foundries, ASSP designers, and

systems developers who demand the highest quality, maximum

performance, and optimum densities for their semiconductor

innovations.

Working closely with third-party vendors of semiconductor

intellectual property (SIP), Virtual Silicon Technology is

establishing its cell-based technology as the foundation for reuse and

exchange of SIP manufactured at foundries throughout the world.

MRC