Takumi NITTONO Koichi NAGATA Yoshiki YAMAUCHI Takashi MAKIMURA Hiroshi ITO Osaake NAKAJIMA
This paper describes small AlGaAs/GaAs HBT's for low-power and high-speed integrated circuits. The device fabrication is based on a new bridged base electrode technology that permits emitter width to be defined down to 1 µm. The new technology features oxygen-ion implantation for emitter-base junction isolation and zinc diffusion for extrinsic base formation. The oxygen-ion implanted emitter-base junction edge has been shown to provide a periphery recombination current much lower than that for the previous proton implanted edgs, the result being a much higher current gain particularly in small devices. The zinc diffusion offers high device yield and good uniformity in device characteristics even for a very thin (0.04 µm) base structure. An HBT with emitter dimensions of 12.4 µm2 yields an fT of 103 GHz and an fmax of 62 GHz, demonstrating that the new technology has a significant advantage in reducing the parasitic elements of small devices. Fabricated one-by-eight static frequency dividers and one-by-four/one-by-five two-modulus prescalers operate at frequencies over 10 GHz. The emitters of HBT's used in the divider are 12.4 µm2 in size, which is the smallest ever reported for AlGaAs/GaAs HBT IC's. These results indicate that the bridged base electrode technology is promising for developing a variety of high-speed HBT IC's.
Toshinobu KANEKO Kenji KOYAMA Routo TERADA
This paper proposes a dynamically randomized version of DES (called RDES) in which a input-dependent swapping Sk(X) is added onto the right half of the input in each round of DES. This new scheme decreases the probability of success in differential cryptanalysis because it decreases the characteristic probability. Each "best" two-round characteristic probability is analyzed for typical schemes of the RDES: (i) RDES-1 with a simple one-level swapping, (ii) RDES-1' with an optimal one-level swapping, (iii) RDES-2 with a simple two-level swapping, and (iv) RDES-2' with an optimal two-level swapping. The main results are as follows. (a) The differential attacks on the 16-round RDES-1' and the 16-round RDES-2 require more computational time than the exhaustive search. (b) A differential attack is substantially inapplicable to the 16-round RDES-2' because more than 263 chosen plaintext pairs are required. (c) The encryption/decryption speed of the n-round RDES is almost the same as that of the n-round DES.
Soichi WATANABE Masao TAKI Yoshitsugu KAMIMURA
The frequency characteristics of whole-body averaged specific absorption rates (SARs) in a human model exposed to a near field of an electric dipole or a magnetic dipole are calculated, using a finite-difference time-domain method. The dependences of the characteristics on the orientation of the dipole and on the distance from the source to the model are investigated. It is shown that the resonant peak of the SAR that appears in the E-polarized far-field exposure is observed only when the source is E-polarized and is located at 80cm, while the peak vanishes or is not noted when the source is located at 40cm and 20cm nor when it is H-polarized. The relationships between the whole-body averaged SARs and the incident electromagnetic field strengths are also investigated. It is suggested that the spatially-averaged value of the dominating component between the electric field and the magnetic field over the space where a human body would occupy provides a relevant measure to estimate the whole-body averaged SAR of a body in the vicinity of a small radiation source.
Masayuki OODO Tsutomu MURASAKI Makoto ANDO
Physical optics (PO) is an approximation method for high-frequency scattering and diffraction problems. But PO fields are inaccurate in the shadow region where the source is screened by the scatterer. It has been difficult to extract the mechanism of this error because PO includes numerical integration. In 2-D problems, PO fields are analytically and accurately expressed in terms of PO equivalent edge currents (PO-EECs) which represent the leading contributions of PO original integration. Comparison of PO in this form and geometrical theory of diffraction (GTD) which gives accurate fields in the shadow region, clarifies the cause of PO errors. For a scatterer with a corner, PO errors are mainly due to the rays emanating from the invisible edges. For a curved surface scatterer, the contributions penetrating the scatterer are small and main PO errors generally consist in PO-EECs itself.
Junghyun HWANG Yoshiteru OOI Shinji OZAWA
An approach to estimate the information of moving objects is described in terms of their kinetic and static properties such as 2D velocity, acceleration, position, and the size of each object for the features of motion snd shape. To obtain the information of motion/shape of multiple objects, an advanced contour matching scheme is developed, which includes the synthesis of edge images and the analysis of object shape with a high matching confidence as well as a low computation cost. The scheme is composed of three algorithms: a motion estimation by an iterative triple cross-correlation, an image synthesis by shifting and masking the object, and a shape analysis for determining the object size. Implementing fuzzy membership functions to the object shape, the scheme gets improved in accuracy of capturing motion and shape of multiple moving objects. Experimental result shows that the proposed method is valid for several walking men in real scene.
Shoichi KOSHIKAWA Kazuya KOBAYASHI
The plane wave diffraction by a two-dimensional parallel-plate waveguide cavity with partial material loading is rigorously analyzed for both the E and the H polarization using the Wiener-Hopf technique. Introducing the Fourier transform for the scattered field and applying boundary conditions in the transform domain, the problem is formulated in terms of the simultaneous Wiener-Hopf equations satisfied by the unknown spectral functions. The Wiener-Hopf equations are solved exactly via the factorization and decomposition procedure leading to the formal solution, which involves branch-cut integrals with unknown integrands as well as infinite series with unknown coefficients. Applying rigorous asymptotics with the aid of the edge condition, the approximate solution to the Wiener-Hopf equations is derived in the form suitable for numerical computations. The scattered field inside and outside the cavity is evaluated by taking the inverse Fourier transform together with the use of the saddle point method. Numerical examples of the radar cross section are presented for various physical parameters, and the far field backscattering characteristics of the cavity are discussed in detail. Some comparisons with a high-frequency technique are also given to validate the present method.
We develop a convergence theory of the simple genetic algorithm (SGA) for two-bit problems (Type I TBP and Type II TBP). SGA consists of two operations, reproduction and crossover. These are imitations of selection and recombination in biological systems. TBP is the simplest optimization problem that is devised with an intention to deceive SGA into deviating from the maximum point. It has been believed that, empirically, SGA can deviate from the maximum point for Type II while it always converges to the maximum point for Type I. Our convergence theory is a first mathematical achievement to ensure that the belief is true. Specifically, we demonstrate the following. (a) SGA always converges to the maximum point for Type I, starting from any initial point. (b) SGA converges either to the maximum or second maximum point for Type II, depending upon its initial points. Regarding Type II, we furthermore elucidate a typical sufficient initial condition under which SGA converges either to the maximum or second maximum point. Consequently, our convergence theory establishes a solid foundation for more general GA convergence theory that is in its initial stage of research. Moreover, it can bring powerful analytical techniques back to the research of original biological systems.
The transient behavior in the fractal admittance acting as a non-integer-rank differential/integral operator, Y(s) ∝ sa with -1a1 and a0, is examined from the point of view of memory effects by employing the distributed-relaxation-time model. The internal state of the diode is found to be represented by the current spectrum i(λ, t) with respect to the carrier relaxation rate λ, leading to a general formulation of the long-time-tail memory behavior characteristic of the operator. One-to-one corrsepondence is found among the input voltage in the past ν(-t), the short-circuit current isc(t) and the initial current spectrum i(λ, 0) within the framework of the Laplace-type integral transformation and its inverse, assuring that each response retains in principle the entire information on the corresponding input, such as the functional form, the magnitude, the onset time, and so forth. The current and voltage responses are exemplified for various single-pulse voltage inputs. The responses to the pulse-train inputs corresponding to different ASCII codes are found to be properly discriminated between one another, showing the potentials of the present memory effects.
Eric TOMACRUZ Jagesh V. SANGHAVI Alberto SANGIOVANNI-VINCENTELLI
The performance of a drift-diffusion device simulator using massively parallel processors is improved by modifying the preconditioner for the iterative solver and by improving the initial guess for the Newton loop. A grid-to-processor mapping scheme is presented to implement the partitioned natural ordering preconditioner on the CM-5. A new preconditioner called the block partitioned natural ordering, which may include fill-ins, improves performance in terms of CPU time and convergence behavior on the CM-5. A multigrid discretization to implement a block Newton initial guess routine is observed to decrease the CPU time by a factor of two. Extensions of the initial guess routine show further reduction in the final fine grid linear iterations.
Junji YAMAUCHI Takashi ANDO Morihiko IKEGAYA Hisamatsu NAKANO
Pure bend loss of a fiber with a trench section is calculated by the alternating-direction implicit finite-difference method. The dependence of the loss on the trench location is evaluated. The mechanism of the oscillatory behavior of the loss is discussed in terms of a modal approach in a dielectric slab waveguide.
Hisako SATO Katsumi TSUNENO Hiroo MASUDA
Recently, high-dose implantation and low temperature annealing have become one of the key techniques in shallow junction formation. To fabricate shallow junction in quarter-micron CMOS VLSIs, it is well known being important to evaluate the transient enhanced diffusion (TED) of implanted dopants at low temperature furnace annealing, which is caused by the damages of implantation. We have newly studied the TED phenomena by a compact empirical method. This approach has merits of simplicity and better physical intuition, because we can use only minimal parameters to describe the TED phenomena. The other purpose of this work is to evaluate two-dimensional transient enhanced diffusion focusing on phosphorus implant and furnace annealing. Firstly, we defined effective diffusivity of the TED and determined extraction procedure of the model parameters. Number of the TED model parameters is minimized to two, which describe effective enhanced diffusivity and its activation energy. The parameters have been extracted from SIMS profile data obtained from samples which range 1013-31015 cm-2 and 850-950 for phosphorus implanted dose and annealing temperature, respectively. Simulation results with the extracted transient enhanced diffusion parameters show good agreements well with the SIMS data within 2% RMS-error. Critical doses for phosphorus enhanced diffusion have been determined in 950 annealing condition. No transient enhanced diffusion is observed at 950 under the implant dose of 11013 cm-2. Also the transient enhanced diffusivity is leveled off over the dose of 11014 cm-2. It is seen that the critical dose in TED phenomena might be temperature dependent to a certain extent. We have also verified that two-dimensional effect of the TED phenomena experimentally. Two-dimensional phosphorus n- layer is chosen to verify the simulation. It was concluded that the TED has isotropic nature in phosphorus n- diffusion formation.
Hiroshi MAEDA Kiyotoshi YASUMOTO
The power transfer characteristics of a symmetric nonlinear directional coupler (NLDC) are analyzed rigorously using the beam propagation method based on the finite difference scheme. The NLDC consists of two linear waveguides separated by a Kerr-like nonlinear gap layer. The change of nonlinear refractive index along the coupler is precisely evaluated by making use of the second-order iteration procedure with respect to a small propagation length. For the incidence of TE0 mode of the isolated linear waveguide, the highly accurate numerical results are obtained for the behavior of power transfer, and the coupling length and critical power for optical switching. The dependencies of the coupling length and critical power on the width of the gap layer and the input power levels are discussed, compared with those predicted by the coupled-mode approximations.
A simulation model for arsenic diffusion in polycrystalline silicon has been developed considering dynamic dopant clustering and polysilicon grain growth kinetics tightly coupled with dopant diffusion and segregation. It was assumed that the polysilicon layer consists of column-like grains surrounded by thin grain-boundaries, so that one dimensional description is permissible for dopant diffusion. The dynamic clustering model was introduced for describing arsenic activation in polysilicon grains, considering the solubility limit increase for arsenic in a polysilicon. For a grain-growth calculation, a previous formula was modified to include a local concentration dependence. The simulation results show that these effects are significant for a high dose implantation case.
When we use the finite-difference time-domain (FD-TD) method to study time-domain electromagnetic fields in the unbounded surroundings, we frequently use a radiation boundary condition (RBC) by means of one-way wave equations. The reflection coefficient by the RBC is independent of frequency, but the reflection coefficient of the finite difference approximation for the RBC depends on a frequency also; this study examines how the reflection characteristics are affected by the frequency, and the study presents the coefficients used in the RBC which gives expected reflection characteristics for a frequency, and presents the application to simulation of the matched termination of a rectangular waveguide.
Shigeru YAMADA Mitsuhiro KIMURA Hiroaki TANAKA Shunji OSAKI
In this paper, we propose a plausible software reliability growth model by applying a mathematical technique of stochastic differential equations. First, we extend a basic differential equation describing the average behavior of software fault-detection processes during the testing phase to a stochastic differential equation of ItÔ type, and derive a probability distribution of its solution processes. Second, we obtain several software reliability measures from the probability distribution. Finally, applying a method of maximum-likelihood we estimate unknown parameters in our model by using available data in the actual software testing procedures, and numerically show the stochastic behavior of the number of faults remaining in the software system. Further, the model is compared among the existing software reliability growth models in terms of goodness-of-fit.
Li CHEN Toru UNO Saburo ADACHI Raymond J. LUEBBERS
This paper discusses the fully three-dimensional finite difference time domain (FDTD) method to analyze a monopole antenna mounted on a rectangular conducting box covered with a layer of dielectric. The effects of the conductivity and the permittivity of the dielectric layer are investigated. It is shown that all calculation results agree very well with the measured data.
An approximate but sufficiently accurate high frequency solution is developed in this paper for analyzing the problem of electromagnetic plane wave scattering by an open-ended, perfectly-conducting, semi-infinite parallel-plate waveguide with a thin layer of lossy or absorbing material on its inner wall, and with a planar termination inside. The high frequency solution combines uniform geometrical theory of diffraction (UTD) and aperture integration (AI) methods. The present method has several advantages in comparison with other methods.
Yonehiko SUNAHARA Hiroyuki OHMINE Hiroshi AOKI Takashi KATAGI Tsutomu HASHIMOTO
This paper describes a novel method to calculate the fields scattered by a polyhedron structure for an incident plane wave. In this method, the fields diffracted by an edge are calculated using the equivalent edge currents which are separated into components dependent on each of the two surfaces which form the edge. The separated equivalent edge currents are based on the Geometrical Theory of Diffraction (GTD). Using this Separated Equivalent Edge Current Method (SEECM) , fields scattered by a polyhedron structure can be calculated without special treatment of the singularity in the diffraction coefficient. This method can be also applied successfully to structures with convex surfaces by modeling them as polyhedron structures.
Kenji HASHIMOTO Takemi MOCHIDA Yasuaki SATO Tetsunori KOBAYASHI Katsuhiko SHIRAI
For the production of high quality synthetic sounds in a text-to-speech system, an excellent synthesizing method of speech signals is indispensable. In this paper, a new speech analysis-synthesis method for the text-to-speech system is proposed. The signals of voiced speech, which have a line spectrum structure at intervals of pitch in the linear frequency domain, can be represented approximately by the superposition of sinusoidal waves. In our system, analysis and synthesis are performed using such a harmonic structure of the signals of voiced speech. In the analysis phase, assuming an exact harmonic structure model at intervals of pitch against the fine structure of the short-time power spectrum, the fundamental frequency f0 is decided so as to minimize the error of the log-power spectrum at each peak position. At the same time, according to the value of the above minimized error, the rate of periodicity of the speech signal is detemined. Then the log-power spectrum envelope is represented by the cosine-series interpolating the data which are sampled at every pitch period. In the synthesis phase, numerical solutions of non-linear differential equations which generate sinusoidal waves are used. For voiced sounds, those equations behave as a group of mutually synchronized oscillators. These sinusoidal waves are superposed so as to reconstruct the line spectrum structure. For voiceless sounds, those non-linear differential equations work as passive filters with input noise sources. Our system has some characteristics as follows. (1) Voiced and voiceless sounds can be treated in a same framowork. (2) Since the phase and the power information of each sinusoidal wave can be easily controlled, if necessary, periodic waveforms in the voiced sounds can be precisely reproduced in the time domain. (3) The fundamental frequency f0 and phoneme duration can be easily changed without much degradation of original sound quality.
Tsuneki YAMASAKI Hirotaka TANAKA
The scattering of electromagnetic waves by a dielectric grating with planar slanted-fringe is analyzed using the improved Fourier series expansion method. In the analysis, the slanted grating region is divided into layers to make an assembly of stratified thin modulated index layers. This method can be applied to a wide range of periodic structures and is especially effective in the case of planar slanted grating, because the electromagnetic fields in the each layer can easily be obtained by shifting the solution in the first layer. In this paper, the numerical results are given for grating with rectangular and sinusoidal dielectric profiles, and for TM and TE cases of arbitrary incident angle. The diffraction efficiencies obtained by the presented method are compared with the results by the coupled-wave approach; the influences of the slant angle on the diffraction efficiencies at the Wood's anomaly and at the coupling resonance frequency are also discussed.