'Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)'
Doi
Abstract
Manufacturing defects that do not affect the functional
operation of low power Integrated Circuits (ICs) can
nevertheless impact their power saving capability. We show that stuck-ON faults on the power switches and resistive bridges between the power networks can impair the power saving capability of power-gating designs. For quantifying the impact of such faults on the power savings of power-gating designs, we propose a diagnosis technique that targets bridges between the power networks. The proposed technique is based on the static power analysis of a power-gating design in stand-by mode and it utilizes a novel on-chip signature generation unit, which is sensitive to the voltage level between power rails, the measurements of which are processed off-line for the diagnosis of bridges that can adversely affect power savings. We explore, through SPICE simulation of the largest IWLS’05 benchmarks synthesised using a 32 nm CMOS technology, the trade-offs achieved by the proposed technique between diagnosis accuracy and area cost and we evaluate its robustness against process
variation. The proposed technique achieves a diagnosis resolution that is higher than 98.6% and 97.9% for bridges of R ≳ 10MΩ(weak bridges) and bridges of R ≲ 10MΩ
(strong bridges), respectively, and a diagnosis accuracy higher than 94.5% for all the examined defects. The area overhead is small and scalable: it is found to be 1.8% and 0.3% for designs with 27K and 157K gate equivalents, respectively