526 research outputs found
DFT and BIST of a multichip module for high-energy physics experiments
Engineers at Politecnico di Torino designed a multichip module for high-energy physics experiments conducted on the Large Hadron Collider. An array of these MCMs handles multichannel data acquisition and signal processing. Testing the MCM from board to die level required a combination of DFT strategie
Online and Offline BIST in IP-Core Design
This article presents an online and offline built-in self-test architecture implemented as an SRAM intellectual-property core for telecommunication applications. The architecture combines fault-latency reduction, code-based fault detection, and architecture-based fault avoidance to meet reliability constraint
Acceleration of Seed Ordering and Selection for High Quality Delay Test
Seed ordering and selection is a key technique to provide high-test quality with limited resources in Built-In Self Test (BIST) environment. We present a hard-to-detect delay fault selection method to accelerate the computation time in seed ordering and selection processes. This selection method can be used to restrict faults for test generation executed in an early stage in seed ordering and selection processes, and reduce a test pattern count and therefore a computation time. We evaluate the impact of the selection method both in deterministic BIST, where one test pattern is decoded from one seed, and mixed-mode BIST, where one seed is expanded to two or more patterns. The statistical delay quality level (SDQL) is adopted as test quality measure, to represent ability to detect small delay defects (SDDs). Experimental results show that our proposed method can significantly reduce computation time from 28% to 63% and base set seed counts from 21% to 67% while slightly sacrificing test quality
Testing Embedded Memories in Telecommunication Systems
Extensive system testing is mandatory nowadays to achieve high product quality. Telecommunication systems are particularly sensitive to such a requirement; to maintain market competitiveness, manufacturers need to combine reduced costs, shorter life cycles, advanced technologies, and high quality. Moreover, strict reliability constraints usually impose very low fault latencies and a high degree of fault detection for both permanent and transient faults. This article analyzes major problems related to testing complex telecommunication systems, with particular emphasis on their memory modules, often so critical from the reliability point of view. In particular, advanced BIST-based solutions are analyzed, and two significant industrial case studies presente
Acceleration of Seed Ordering and Selection For High Quality VLSI Delay Test
Seed ordering and selection is a key technique to provide high-test quality with limited resources in Built-In Self Test (BIST) environment. We present a hard-to-detect delay fault selection method to optimize the computation time in seed ordering and selection processes. This selection method can be used to select faults for test generation when it is impractical to target all delay faults resulting large test pattern count and long Computation time. Three types of selection categories are considered, ranged in the number of seeds it produced, which is useful when we consider computing resources, such as memory and storage. We also evaluate the impact of the selection method in mixed-mode BIST when seed are expanded to more patterns, and evaluate the statistical delay quality level (SDQL) with the original work. Experimental results show that our proposed method can significantly reduce computation time while slightly sacrificing test quality
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Testability considerations for implementing an embedded memory subsystem
textThere are a number of testability considerations for VLSI design,
but test coverage, test time, accuracy of test patterns and
correctness of design information for DFD (Design for debug) are
the most important ones in design with embedded memories. The goal
of DFT (Design-for-Test) is to achieve zero defects. When it comes
to the memory subsystem in SOCs (system on chips), many flavors of
memory BIST (built-in self test) are able to get high test
coverage in a memory, but often, no proper attention is given to
the memory interface logic (shadow logic). Functional testing and
BIST are the most prevalent tests for this logic, but functional
testing is impractical for complicated SOC designs. As a result,
industry has widely used at-speed scan testing to detect delay
induced defects. Compared with functional testing, scan-based
testing for delay faults reduces overall pattern generation
complexity and cost by enhancing both controllability and
observability of flip-flops. However, without proper modeling of
memory, Xs are generated from memories. Also, when the design has
chip compression logic, the number of ATPG patterns is increased
significantly due to Xs from memories. In this dissertation, a
register based testing method and X prevention logic are presented
to tackle these problems.
An important design stage for scan based testing with memory
subsystems is the step to create a gate level model and verify
with this model. The flow needs to provide a robust ATPG netlist
model. Most industry standard CAD tools used to analyze fault
coverage and generate test vectors require gate level models.
However, custom embedded memories are typically designed using a
transistor-level flow, there is a need for an abstraction step to
generate the gate models, which must be equivalent to the actual
design (transistor level). The contribution of the research is a
framework to verify that the gate level representation of custom
designs is equivalent to the transistor-level design.
Compared to basic stuck-at fault testing, the number of patterns
for at-speed testing is much larger than for basic stuck-at fault
testing. So reducing test and data volume are important. In this
desertion, a new scan reordering method is introduced to reduce
test data with an optimal routing solution. With in depth
understanding of embedded memories and flows developed during the
study of custom memory DFT, a custom embedded memory Bit Mapping
method using a symbolic simulator is presented in the last chapter
to achieve high yield for memories.Electrical and Computer Engineerin
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