294 research outputs found

    An efficient logic fault diagnosis framework based on effect-cause approach

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    Fault diagnosis plays an important role in improving the circuit design process and the manufacturing yield. With the increasing number of gates in modern circuits, determining the source of failure in a defective circuit is becoming more and more challenging. In this research, we present an efficient effect-cause diagnosis framework for combinational VLSI circuits. The framework consists of three stages to obtain an accurate and reasonably precise diagnosis. First, an improved critical path tracing algorithm is proposed to identify an initial suspect list by backtracing from faulty primary outputs toward primary inputs. Compared to the traditional critical path tracing approach, our algorithm is faster and exact. Second, a novel probabilistic ranking model is applied to rank the suspects so that the most suspicious one will be ranked at or near the top. Several fast filtering methods are used to prune unrelated suspects. Finally, to refine the diagnosis, fault simulation is performed on the top suspect nets using several common fault models. The difference between the observed faulty behavior and the simulated behavior is used to rank each suspect. Experimental results on ISCAS85 benchmark circuits show that this diagnosis approach is efficient both in terms of memory space and CPU time and the diagnosis results are accurate and reasonably precise

    A deductive technique for diagnosis of bridging faults

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    FPGA BASED SELF-HEALING STRATEGY FOR SYNCHRONOUS SEQUENTIAL CIRCUITS

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    The paper develops an efficient mechanism with a view to healing bridging faults in synchronous sequential circuits. The scheme inserts faults randomly into the system at the signal levels, encompasses ways to intrigue the state of the signals and carries it with steps to rig out the true values at the primary output lines. The attempts espouse the ability of the methodology to explore the occurrence of a variety of single and multiple bridging faults and arrive at the true output. The approach enables to detect the occurrence of wired-OR and wired AND bridging faults in the combinational part of the serial binary adder as the CUT and heal both the inter and intra-gate faults through the use of the proposed methodology. It allows claiming a lower area overhead and computationally a sharp increase in the fault coverage area over the existing Triple Modular Redundancy (TMR) technique. The Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGA) based Spartan architecture operates through Very High-Speed Integrated Circuit Hardware Description Language (VHDL) to synthesize the Modelsim code for validating the simulation exercises. The claim incites to increase the reliability of the synchronous sequential circuits and espouse a place for the use of the strategy in the digital world

    Real Time Fault Detection and Diagnostics Using FPGA-Based Architecture

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    Errors within circuits caused by radiation continue to be an important concern to developers. A new methodology of real time fault detection and diagnostics utilizing FPGA based architectures while under radiation were investigated in this research. The contributions of this research are focused on three areas; a full test platform to evaluate a circuit while under irradiation, an algorithm to detect and diagnose fault locations within a circuit, and finally to characterize Triple Design Triple Modular Redundancy (TDTMR), a new form of TMR. Five different test setups, injected fault test, gamma radiation test, thermal radiation test, optical laser test, and optical flash test, were used to assess the effectiveness of these three research goals. The testing platform was constructed with two FPGA boards, the Device Under Test (DUT) and the controller board, to generate and evaluate specific vector sets sent to the DUT. The testing platform combines a myriad of testing and measuring equipment and work hours onto one small reprogrammable and reusable FPGA. This device was able to be used in multiple test setups. The controlling logic can be interchanged to test multiple circuit designs under various forms of radiation. The detection and diagnostic algorithm was designed to determine fault locations in real time. The algorithm used for diagnosing the fault location uses inverse deductive elimination. By using test generation tools, fault lists were developed. The fault lists were used to narrow \ the possible fault locations within the circuit. The algorithm is able to detect single stuck at faults based on these lists. The algorithm can also detect multiple output errors but not able to diagnose multiple stuck at faults in real time

    Investigations into the feasibility of an on-line test methodology

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    This thesis aims to understand how information coding and the protocol that it supports can affect the characteristics of electronic circuits. More specifically, it investigates an on-line test methodology called IFIS (If it Fails It Stops) and its impact on the design, implementation and subsequent characteristics of circuits intended for application specific lC (ASIC) technology. The first study investigates the influences of information coding and protocol on the characteristics of IFIS systems. The second study investigates methods of circuit design applicable to IFIS cells and identifies the· technique possessing the characteristics most suitable for on-line testing. The third study investigates the characteristics of a 'real-life' commercial UART re-engineered using the techniques resulting from the previous two studies. The final study investigates the effects of the halting properties endowed by the protocol on failure diagnosis within IFIS systems. The outcome of this work is an identification and characterisation of the factors that influence behaviour, implementation costs and the ability to test and diagnose IFIS designs

    Fault-Tolerant Computing: An Overview

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    Coordinated Science Laboratory was formerly known as Control Systems LaboratoryNASA / NAG-1-613Semiconductor Research Corporation / 90-DP-109Joint Services Electronics Program / N00014-90-J-127

    Modeling and simulation of defect induced faults in CMOS IC's

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    On the development of a fast and accurate bridging fault simulator

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    An Improved Method of Per-Test X-Fault Diagnosis for Deep-Submicron LSI Circuits

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    Per-test diagnosis based on the X-fault model is an effective approach for a circuit with physical defects of nondeterministic logic behavior. However, the extensive use of vias and the unpredictable order relation among threshold voltages at fanout branches, both being typical phenomena in a deep-submicron circuit, have not been fully addressed by conventional per-test X-fault diagnosis. To solve these problems, this paper proposes an improved per-test X-fault diagnosis method, featuring (1) an extended X-fault model to handle vias and (2) occurrence probabilities of logic behavior for a physical defect to handle the unpredictable relation among threshold voltages. Experimental result show the effectiveness of the proposed method.7th Workshop on RTL and High Level Testing (WRTLT`06), November 23-24, 2006, Fukuoka, Japa

    Testability and redundancy techniques for improved yield and reliability of CMOS VLSI circuits

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    The research presented in this thesis is concerned with the design of fault-tolerant integrated circuits as a contribution to the design of fault-tolerant systems. The economical manufacture of very large area ICs will necessitate the incorporation of fault-tolerance features which are routinely employed in current high density dynamic random access memories. Furthermore, the growing use of ICs in safety-critical applications and/or hostile environments in addition to the prospect of single-chip systems will mandate the use of fault-tolerance for improved reliability. A fault-tolerant IC must be able to detect and correct all possible faults that may affect its operation. The ability of a chip to detect its own faults is not only necessary for fault-tolerance, but it is also regarded as the ultimate solution to the problem of testing. Off-line periodic testing is selected for this research because it achieves better coverage of physical faults and it requires less extra hardware than on-line error detection techniques. Tests for CMOS stuck-open faults are shown to detect all other faults. Simple test sequence generation procedures for the detection of all faults are derived. The test sequences generated by these procedures produce a trivial output, thereby, greatly simplifying the task of test response analysis. A further advantage of the proposed test generation procedures is that they do not require the enumeration of faults. The implementation of built-in self-test is considered and it is shown that the hardware overhead is comparable to that associated with pseudo-random and pseudo-exhaustive techniques while achieving a much higher fault coverage through-the use of the proposed test generation procedures. The consideration of the problem of testing the test circuitry led to the conclusion that complete test coverage may be achieved if separate chips cooperate in testing each other's untested parts. An alternative approach towards complete test coverage would be to design the test circuitry so that it is as distributed as possible and so that it is tested as it performs its function. Fault correction relies on the provision of spare units and a means of reconfiguring the circuit so that the faulty units are discarded. This raises the question of what is the optimum size of a unit? A mathematical model, linking yield and reliability is therefore developed to answer such a question and also to study the effects of such parameters as the amount of redundancy, the size of the additional circuitry required for testing and reconfiguration, and the effect of periodic testing on reliability. The stringent requirement on the size of the reconfiguration logic is illustrated by the application of the model to a typical example. Another important result concerns the effect of periodic testing on reliability. It is shown that periodic off-line testing can achieve approximately the same level of reliability as on-line testing, even when the time between tests is many hundreds of hours
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