130 research outputs found

    REALIZATION OF LOW TRANSITION BASED PRPG FOR POWER OPTIMIZED APPLICATIONS

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    This paper proposes low power pseudo random test pattern generator. This produces the necessary test patterns which are used for running the circuit under test for detecting faults. Power consumption of the circuit under test is measured by switching activity of the inside logic which depends on the randomness of applied stimulus. Power consumption is greatly increased due to the reduction of correlation between the successive vectors of applied stimulus. A modified conventional linear feedback shift register is implemented for reducing power of circuit under test by generating the patterns by reducing the utilization of hard ware. The main intension of producing intermediate patterns is to reduce the conventional activity of primary inputs (PI) that which reduces the switching activities inside the CUT and by this power consumption is reduced without using huge hardware

    A MODIFIED FAULT COVERAGE ARCHITECTURE FOR A LOW POWER BIST TEST PATTERN GENERATOR USING LP-LFSR

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    This paper proposes low power pseudo random Test Pattern generation .This test pattern is run on the circuit under test for desired fault coverage. The power consumed by the chip under test is a measure of the switching activity of the logic inside the chip which depends largely on the randomness of the applied input stimulus. Reduced correlation between the successive vectors of the applied stimulus into the circuit under test can result in much higher power consumption by the device than the budgeted power. A new low power pattern generation technique is implemented using a modified conventional Linear Feedback Shift Register which can perform fault analysis and reduce the power of a circuit during test by generating three intermediate patterns between the random patterns by reducing the hardware utilization. The goal of having intermediate patterns is to reduce the transitional activities of Primary Inputs (PI) which eventually reduces the switching activities inside the Circuit under Test (CUT) and hence power consumption is also reduced without any penalty in the hardware resources

    Scalable diversified antirandom test pattern generation with improved fault coverage for black-box circuit testing

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    Pseudorandom testing is incapable of utilizing the success rate of preceding test patterns while generating subsequent test patterns. Many redundant test patterns have been generated that increase the test length without any significant increase in the fault coverage. An extension to pseudorandom testing is Antirandom that induces divergent patterns by maximizing the Total Hamming Distance (THD) and Total Cartesian Distance (TCD) of every subsequent test pattern. However, the Antirandom test sequence generation algorithm is prone to unsystematic selection when more than one patterns possess maximum THD and TCD. As a result, diversity among test sequences is compromised, lowering the fault coverage. Therefore, this thesis analyses the effect of Hamming distance in vertical as well as horizontal dimension to enhance diversity among test patterns. First contribution of this thesis is the proposal of a Diverse Antirandom (DAR) test pattern generation algorithm. DAR employs Horizontal Total Hamming Distance (HTHD) along with THD and TCD for diversity enhancement among test patterns as maximum distance test pattern generation. The HTHD and TCD are used as distance metrics that increase computational complexity in divergent test sequence generation. Therefore, the second contribution of this thesis is the proposal of tree traversal search method to maximize diversity among test patterns. The proposed method uses bits mutation of a temporary test pattern following a path leading towards maximization of TCD. Results of fault simulations on benchmark circuits have shown that DAR significantly improves the fault coverage up to 18.3% as compared to Antirandom. Moreover, the computational complexity of Antirandom is reduced from exponential O(2n) to linear O(n). Next, the DARalgorithm is modified to ease hardware implementation for on-chip test generation. Therefore, the third contribution of this thesis is the design of a hardware-oriented DAR (HODA) test pattern generator architecture as an alternative to linear feedback shift register (LFSR) that consists of large number of memory elements. Parallel concatenation of the HODA architecture is designed to reduce the number of memory elements by implementing bit slicing architecture. It has been proven through simulation that the proposed architecture has increased fault coverage up to 66% and a reduction of 46.59% gate count compared to the LFSR. Consequently, this thesis presents uniform and scalable test pattern generator architecture for built-in self-test (BIST) applications and solution to maximum distance test pattern generation for high fault coverage in black-box environment
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