533 research outputs found

    A novel path delay fault simulator using binary logic

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    A novel path delay fault simulator for combinational logic circuits which is capable of detecting both robust and nonrobust paths is presented. Particular emphasis has been given for the use of binary logic rather than the multiple-valued logic as used in the existing simulators which contributes to the reduction of the overall complexity of the algorithm. A rule based approach has been developed which identifies all robust and nonrobust paths tested by a two-pattern test <V1,V2>, while backtracing from the POs to PIs in a depth-first manner. Rules are also given to find probable glitches and to determine how they propagate through the circuit, which enables the identification of nonrobust paths. Experimental results on several ISCAS'85 benchmark circuits demonstrate the efficiency of the algorithm

    Layout level design for testability strategy applied to a CMOS cell library

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    The layout level design for testability (LLDFT) rules used here allow to avoid some hard to detect faults or even undetectable faults on a cell library by modifying the cell layout without changing their behavior and achieving a good level of reliability. These rules avoid some open faults or reduce their appearance probability. The main purpose has been to apply that set of LLDFT rules on the cells of the library designed at the Centre Nacional de Microelectronica (CNM) in order to obtain a highly testable cell library. The authors summarize the main results (area overhead and performance degradation) of the application of the LLDFT rules on the cell

    Optimization of Cell-Aware Test

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    Optimization of Cell-Aware Test

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    Reliability-energy-performance optimisation in combinational circuits in presence of soft errors

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    PhD ThesisThe reliability metric has a direct relationship to the amount of value produced by a circuit, similar to the performance metric. With advances in CMOS technology, digital circuits become increasingly more susceptible to soft errors. Therefore, it is imperative to be able to assess and improve the level of reliability of these circuits. A framework for evaluating and improving the reliability of combinational circuits is proposed, and an interplay between the metrics of reliability, energy and performance is explored. Reliability evaluation is divided into two levels of characterisation: stochastic fault model (SFM) of the component library and a design-specific critical vector model (CVM). The SFM captures the properties of components with regard to the interference which causes error. The CVM is derived from a limited number of simulation runs on the specific design at the design time and producing the reliability metric. The idea is to move the high-complexity problem of the stochastic characterisation of components to the generic part of the design process, and to do it just once for a large number of specific designs. The method is demonstrated on a range of circuits with various structures. A three-way trade-off between reliability, energy, and performance has been discovered; this trade-off facilitates optimisations of circuits and their operating conditions. A technique for improving the reliability of a circuit is proposed, based on adding a slow stage at the primary output. Slow stages have the ability to absorb narrow glitches from prior stages, thus reducing the error probability. Such stages, or filters, suppress most of the glitches generated in prior stages and prevent them from arriving at the primary output of the circuit. Two filter solutions have been developed and analysed. The results show a dramatic improvement in reliability at the expense of minor performance and energy penalties. To alleviate the problem of the time-consuming analogue simulations involved in the proposed method, a simplification technique is proposed. This technique exploits the equivalence between the properties of the gates within a path and the equivalence between paths. On the basis of these equivalences, it is possible to reduce the number of simulation runs. The effectiveness of the proposed technique is evaluated by applying it to different circuits with a representative variety of path topologies. The results show a significant decrease in the time taken to estimate reliability at the expense of a minor decrease in the accuracy of estimation. The simplification technique enables the use of the proposed method in applications with complex circuits.Ministry of Education and Scientific Research in Liby

    Reducing Library Characterization Time for Cell-aware Test while Maintaining Test Quality

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    Cell-aware test (CAT) explicitly targets faults caused by defects inside library cells to improve test quality, compared with conventional automatic test pattern generation (ATPG) approaches, which target faults only at the boundaries of library cells. The CAT methodology consists of two stages. StageΒ 1, based on dedicated analog simulation, library characterization per cell identifies which cell-level test pattern detects which cell-internal defect; this detection information is encoded in a defect detection matrix (DDM). In StageΒ 2, with the DDMs as inputs, cell-aware ATPG generates chip-level test patterns per circuit design that is build up of interconnected instances of library cells. This paper focuses on StageΒ 1, library characterization, as both test quality and cost are determined by the set of cell-internal defects identified and simulated in the CAT tool flow. With the aim to achieve the best test quality, we first propose an approach to identify a comprehensive set, referred toΒ as full set, of potential open- and short-defect locations based on cell layout. However, the full set of defects can be large even for a single cell, making the time cost of the defect simulation in StageΒ 1 unaffordable. Subsequently, to reduce the simulation time, we collapse the full set to a compact set of defects which serves as input of the defect simulation. The full set is stored for the diagnosis and failure analysis. With inspecting the simulation results, we propose a method to verify the test quality based on the compact set of defects and, if necessary, to compensate the test quality to the same level as that based on the full set of defects. For 351 combinational library cells in Cadence’s GPDK045 45nm library, we simulate only 5.4% defects from the full set to achieve the same test quality based on the full set of defects. In total, the simulation time, via linear extrapolation per cell, would be reduced by 96.4% compared with the time based on the full set of defects

    High Quality Compact Delay Test Generation

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    Delay testing is used to detect timing defects and ensure that a circuit meets its timing specifications. The growing need for delay testing is a result of the advances in deep submicron (DSM) semiconductor technology and the increase in clock frequency. Small delay defects that previously were benign now produce delay faults, due to reduced timing margins. This research focuses on the development of new test methods for small delay defects, within the limits of affordable test generation cost and pattern count. First, a new dynamic compaction algorithm has been proposed to generate compacted test sets for K longest paths per gate (KLPG) in combinational circuits or scan-based sequential circuits. This algorithm uses a greedy approach to compact paths with non-conflicting necessary assignments together during test generation. Second, to make this dynamic compaction approach practical for industrial use, a recursive learning algorithm has been implemented to identify more necessary assignments for each path, so that the path-to-test-pattern matching using necessary assignments is more accurate. Third, a realistic low cost fault coverage metric targeting both global and local delay faults has been developed. The metric suggests the test strategy of generating a different number of longest paths for each line in the circuit while maintaining high fault coverage. The number of paths and type of test depends on the timing slack of the paths under this metric. Experimental results for ISCAS89 benchmark circuits and three industry circuits show that the pattern count of KLPG can be significantly reduced using the proposed methods. The pattern count is comparable to that of transition fault test, while achieving higher test quality. Finally, the proposed ATPG methodology has been applied to an industrial quad-core microprocessor. FMAX testing has been done on many devices and silicon data has shown the benefit of KLPG test
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