6 research outputs found

    Evaluating Architectural, Redundancy, and Implementation Strategies for Radiation Hardening of FinFET Integrated Circuits

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    In this article, authors explore radiation hardening techniques through the design of a test chip implemented in 16-nm FinFET technology, along with architectural and redundancy design space exploration of its modules. Nine variants of matrix multiplication were taped out and irradiated with neutrons. The results obtained from the neutron campaign revealed that the radiation-hardened variants present superior resiliency when either local or global triple modular redundancy (TMR) schemes are employed. Furthermore, simulation-based fault injection was utilized to validate the measurements and to explore the effects of different implementation strategies on failure rates. We further show that the interplay between these different implementation strategies is not trivial to capture and that synthesis optimizations can effectively break assumptions about the effectiveness of redundancy schemes

    Assessing the effectiveness of different test approaches for power devices in a PCB

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    Power electronic systems employing Printed Circuit Boards (PCBs) are broadly used in many applications, including some safety-critical ones. Several standards (e.g., ISO26262 for the automotive sector and DO-178 for avionics) mandate the adoption of effective test procedures for all electronic systems. However, the metrics to be used to compute the effectiveness of the adopted test procedures are not so clearly defined for power devices and systems. In the last years, some commercial fault simulation tools (e.g., DefectSim by Mentor Graphics and TestMAX by Synopsys) for analog circuits have been introduced, together with some new fault models. With these new tools, systematic analog fault simulation finally became practically feasible. The aim of this paper is twofold: first, we propose a method to extend the usage of the new analog fault models to power devices, thus allowing to compute a Fault Coverage figure for a given test. Secondly, we adopt the method on a case study, for which we quantitatively evaluate the effectiveness of some test procedures commonly used at the PCB level for the detection of faults inside power devices. A typical Power Supply Unit (PSU) used in industrial products, including power transistors and power diodes, is considered. The analysis of the gathered results shows that using the new method we can identify the main points of strength / weakness of the different test solutions in a quantitative and deterministic manner, and pinpoint the faults escaping to each one

    Energy-aware Fault-tolerant Scheduling for Hard Real-time Systems

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    Over the past several decades, we have experienced tremendous growth of real-time systems in both scale and complexity. This progress is made possible largely due to advancements in semiconductor technology that have enabled the continuous scaling and massive integration of transistors on a single chip. In the meantime, however, the relentless transistor scaling and integration have dramatically increased the power consumption and degraded the system reliability substantially. Traditional real-time scheduling techniques with the sole emphasis on guaranteeing timing constraints have become insufficient. In this research, we studied the problem of how to develop advanced scheduling methods on hard real-time systems that are subject to multiple design constraints, in particular, timing, energy consumption, and reliability constraints. To this end, we first investigated the energy minimization problem with fault-tolerance requirements for dynamic-priority based hard real-time tasks on a single-core processor. Three scheduling algorithms have been developed to judiciously make tradeoffs between fault tolerance and energy reduction since both design objectives usually conflict with each other. We then shifted our research focus from single-core platforms to multi-core platforms as the latter are becoming mainstream. Specifically, we launched our research in fault-tolerant multi-core scheduling for fixed-priority tasks as fixed-priority scheduling is one of the most commonly used schemes in the industry today. For such systems, we developed several checkpointing-based partitioning strategies with the joint consideration of fault tolerance and energy minimization. At last, we exploited the implicit relations between real-time tasks in order to judiciously make partitioning decisions with the aim of improving system schedulability. According to the simulation results, our design strategies have been shown to be very promising for emerging systems and applications where timeliness, fault-tolerance, and energy reduction need to be simultaneously addressed

    Robustness and durability aspects in the design of power management circuits for IoT applications

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    With the increasing interest in the heterogeneous world of the “Internet of Things” (IoT), new compelling challenges arise in the field of electronic design, especially concerning the development of innovative power management solutions. Being this diffusion a consolidated reality nowadays, emerging needs like lifetime, durability and robustness are becoming the new watchwords for power management, being a common ground which can dramatically improve service life and confidence in these devices. The possibility to design nodes which do not need external power supply is a crucial point in this scenario. Moreover, the development of autonomous nodes which are substantially maintenance free, and which therefore can be placed in unreachable or harsh environments is another enabling aspect for the exploitation of this technology. In this respect, the study of energy harvesting techniques is increasingly earning interest again. Along with efficiency aspects, degradation aspects are the other main research field with respect to lifetime, durability and robustness of IoT devices, especially related to aging mechanisms which are peculiar in power management and power conversion circuits, like for example battery wear during usage or hot-carrier degradation (HCD) in power MOSFETs. In this thesis different aspects related to lifetime, durability and robustness in the field of power management circuits are studied, leading to interesting contributions. Innovative designs of DC/DC power converters are studied and developed, especially related to reliability aspects of the use of electrochemical cells as power sources. Moreover, an advanced IoT node is proposed, based on energy harvesting techniques, which features an intelligent dynamically adaptive power management circuit. As a further contribution, a novel algorithm is proposed, which is able to effectively estimate the efficiency of a DC/DC converter for photovoltaic applications at runtime. Finally, an innovative DC/DC power converter with embedded monitoring of hot-carrier degradation in power MOSFETs is designed
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