3 research outputs found

    Circuit-level modeling for concurrent testing of operational defects due to gate oxide breakdown

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    As device sizes shrink and current densities increase, the probability of device failures due to gate oxide breakdown (OBD) also increases. To provide designs that are tolerant to such failures, we must investigate and understand the manifestations of this physical phenomenon at the circuit and system level. In this paper, we develop a model for operational OBD defects, and we explore how to test for faults due to OBD. For a NAND gate, we derive the necessary input conditions that excite and detect errors due to OBD defects at the gate level. We show that traditional pattern generators fail to exercise all of these defects. Finally, we show that these test patterns can be propagated and justified for a combinational circuit in a manner similar to traditional ATPG.

    A Sustainable Autonomic Architecture for Organically Reconfigurable Computing Systems

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    A Sustainable Autonomic Architecture for Organically Reconfigurable Computing System based on SRAM Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs) is proposed, modeled analytically, simulated, prototyped, and measured. Low-level organic elements are analyzed and designed to achieve novel self-monitoring, self-diagnosis, and self-repair organic properties. The prototype of a 2-D spatial gradient Sobel video edge-detection organic system use-case developed on a XC4VSX35 Xilinx Virtex-4 Video Starter Kit is presented. Experimental results demonstrate the applicability of the proposed architecture and provide the infrastructure to quantify the performance and overcome fault-handling limitations. Dynamic online autonomous functionality restoration after a malfunction or functionality shift due to changing requirements is achieved at a fine granularity by exploiting dynamic Partial Reconfiguration (PR) techniques. A Genetic Algorithm (GA)-based hardware/software platform for intrinsic evolvable hardware is designed and evaluated for digital circuit repair using a variety of well-accepted benchmarks. Dynamic bitstream compilation for enhanced mutation and crossover operators is achieved by directly manipulating the bitstream using a layered toolset. Experimental results on the edge-detector organic system prototype have shown complete organic online refurbishment after a hard fault. In contrast to previous toolsets requiring many milliseconds or seconds, an average of 0.47 microseconds is required to perform the genetic mutation, 4.2 microseconds to perform the single point conventional crossover, 3.1 microseconds to perform Partial Match Crossover (PMX) as well as Order Crossover (OX), 2.8 microseconds to perform Cycle Crossover (CX), and 1.1 milliseconds for one input pattern intrinsic evaluation. These represent a performance advantage of three orders of magnitude over the JBITS software framework and more than seven orders of magnitude over the Xilinx design flow. Combinatorial Group Testing (CGT) technique was combined with the conventional GA in what is called CGT-pruned GA to reduce repair time and increase system availability. Results have shown up to 37.6% convergence advantage using the pruned technique. Lastly, a quantitative stochastic sustainability model for reparable systems is formulated to evaluate the Sustainability of FPGA-based reparable systems. This model computes at design-time the resources required for refurbishment to meet mission availability and lifetime requirements in a given fault-susceptible missions. By applying this model to MCNC benchmark circuits and the Sobel Edge-Detector in a realistic space mission use-case on Xilinx Virtex-4 FPGA, we demonstrate a comprehensive model encompassing the inter-relationships between system sustainability and fault rates, utilized, and redundant hardware resources, repair policy parameters and decaying reparability

    Self-healing concepts involving fine-grained redundancy for electronic systems

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    The start of the digital revolution came through the metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistor (MOSFET) in 1959 followed by massive integration onto a silicon die by means of constant down scaling of individual components. Digital systems for certain applications require fault-tolerance against faults caused by temporary or permanent influence. The most widely used technique is triple module redundancy (TMR) in conjunction with a majority voter, which is regarded as a passive fault mitigation strategy. Design by functional resilience has been applied to circuit structures for increased fault-tolerance and towards self-diagnostic triggered self-healing. The focus of this thesis is therefore to develop new design strategies for fault detection and mitigation within transistor, gate and cell design levels. The research described in this thesis makes three contributions. The first contribution is based on adding fine-grained transistor level redundancy to logic gates in order to accomplish stuck-at fault-tolerance. The objective is to realise maximum fault-masking for a logic gate with minimal added redundant transistors. In the case of non-maskable stuck-at faults, the gate structure generates an intrinsic indication signal that is suitable for autonomous self-healing functions. As a result, logic circuitry utilising this design is now able to differentiate between gate faults and faults occurring in inter-gate connections. This distinction between fault-types can then be used for triggering selective self-healing responses. The second contribution is a logic matrix element which applies the three core redundancy concepts of spatial- temporal- and data-redundancy. This logic structure is composed of quad-modular redundant structures and is capable of selective fault-masking and localisation depending of fault-type at the cell level, which is referred to as a spatiotemporal quadded logic cell (QLC) structure. This QLC structure has the capability of cellular self-healing. Through the combination of fault-tolerant and masking logic features the QLC is designed with a fault-behaviour that is equal to existing quadded logic designs using only 33.3% of the equivalent transistor resources. The inherent self-diagnosing feature of QLC is capable of identifying individual faulty cells and can trigger self-healing features. The final contribution is focused on the conversion of finite state machines (FSM) into memory to achieve better state transition timing, minimal memory utilisation and fault protection compared to common FSM designs. A novel implementation based on content-addressable type memory (CAM) is used to achieve this. The FSM is further enhanced by creating the design out of logic gates of the first contribution by achieving stuck-at fault resilience. Applying cross-data parity checking, the FSM becomes equipped with single bit fault detection and correction
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