Title :
On the complexity of bridging fault simulation techniques for CMOS integrated circuits
Author :
Ryan, Chrlstopher A.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Kentucky Univ., Lexington, KY, USA
Abstract :
Accepted integrated circuit verification techniques involve stuck-at fault simulation. However, it has been shown that the majority of actual physical faults in the faulty integrated circuit are bridging faults. For this reason, the interest in bridging fault simulation techniques has increased. One characteristic with bridging faults is that the bridging fault may have electrical as well as logical behavior. This characteristic makes detection of bridging faults more difficult and this characteristic increases the complexity of bridging fault simulation. The three techniques most widely used for bridging fault simulation are current testing, stuck-at testing and delay testing. This paper compares the complexity and robustness of the three techniques and new developments in the three techniques. Results show the current testing technique to be the most robust and have the lowest complexity which approaches that of stuck-at fault simulation complexity
Keywords :
CMOS digital integrated circuits; circuit analysis computing; delays; fault diagnosis; integrated circuit testing; CMOS integrated circuits; bridging fault simulation techniques; current testing; delay testing; integrated circuit verification techniques; robustness; stuck-at testing; CMOS integrated circuits; Circuit faults; Circuit simulation; Circuit testing; Computational modeling; Integrated circuit modeling; Integrated circuit testing; Logic testing; Robustness; Semiconductor device modeling;
Conference_Titel :
ASIC Conference and Exhibit, 1995., Proceedings of the Eighth Annual IEEE International
Conference_Location :
Austin, TX
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-2707-1
DOI :
10.1109/ASIC.1995.580705