DocumentCode :
21752
Title :
Design for Testability Support for Launch and Capture Power Reduction in Launch-Off-Shift and Launch-Off-Capture Testing
Author :
Saeed, Samah Mohamed ; Sinanoglu, Ozgur
Author_Institution :
Comput. Sci. Dept., New York Univ. Polytech. Inst., New York, NY, USA
Volume :
22
Issue :
3
fYear :
2014
fDate :
Mar-14
Firstpage :
516
Lastpage :
521
Abstract :
At-speed or even faster-than-at-speed testing of VLSI circuits aims for high-quality screening of the circuits by targeting performance-related faults. On one hand, a compact test set with highly effective patterns, each detecting multiple delay faults, is desirable for lower test costs. On the other hand, such patterns increase switching activity during launch and capture operations. Patterns optimized for quality and cost may thus end up violating peak-power constraints, resulting in yield loss, while pattern generation under low switching activity constraints may lead to loss in test quality and/or pattern count inflation. In this paper, we propose design for testability (DfT) support for enabling the use of a set of patterns optimized for cost and quality as is, yet in a low power manner; we develop three different DfT mechanisms, one for launch-off shift, one for launch-off capture, and one for mixed at-speed testing. The proposed DfT support enables a design partitioning approach, where any given set of patterns, generated in a power-unaware manner, can be utilized to test the design regions one at a time, reducing both launch and capture power in a design-flow-compatible manner. This way, the test pattern count and quality of the optimized test set can be preserved, while lowering the launch/capture power.
Keywords :
automatic test pattern generation; design for testability; integrated circuit testing; VLSI circuits; delay fault; design for testability support; design partitioning; high quality screening; launch and capture power reduction; launch power reduction; launch-off-capture testing; launch-off-shift testing; mixed at-speed testing; optimized test; pattern set generation; power unaware manner; switching activity; test pattern count; Design partitioning; launch-off capture (LOC); launch-off shift (LOS); peak power reduction; test power reduction;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) Systems, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1063-8210
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TVLSI.2013.2248764
Filename :
6502264
Link To Document :
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