scholarly journals MULTI-DEGREE SMOOTHER FOR LOW POWER TESTABLE DIGITAL SYSTEM DESIGN USING BS-LFSR AND SCAN-CHAIN ORDERING TECHNIQUES

Author(s):  
V. SURYANARAYANA ◽  
K. MIRANJI

Testing of digital VLSI circuits entails many challenges as a consequence of rapid growth of semiconductor manufacturing technology and the unprecedented levels of design complexity and the gigahertz range of operating frequencies. These challenges include keeping the average and peak power dissipation and test application time within acceptable limits. This dissertation proposes techniques to addresses these challenges during test. The first proposed technique, called bit-swapping LFSR (BS-LFSR), uses new observations concerning the output sequence of an LFSR to design a low-transition test-pattern-generator (TPG) for test-per-clock built-in self-test (BIST) to achieve reduction in the overall switching activity in the circuit-under-test (CUT). The obtained results show up to 28% power reduction for the proposed design, and up-to 63% when it is combined with another established technique. The proposed BS-LFSR is then extended for use in test-per-scantest vectors show up to 60%reduction in average power consumption. The BS-LFSR is then extended further to act as a multi-degree smoother for test patterns generated by conventional LFSRs before applying them to the CUT. Experimental results show up to 55% reduction in average power. Another technique that aims to reduce peak power in scan-based BIST is presented. The new technique uses a two-phase scan-chain ordering algorithm to reduce average and peak power in scan and capture cycles. Experimental results show up to 65% and 55% reduction in average and peak power, respectively. Finally, a technique that aims to significantly increase the fault coverage in test-Per scan BIST, while keeping the test-application time short, is proposed. The results obtained show a significant improvement in fault coverage and test application time compared with other techniques.

2015 ◽  
Vol 24 (06) ◽  
pp. 1550084 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haiying Yuan ◽  
Jiaping Mei ◽  
Xun Sun ◽  
K. T. Cheng ◽  
Kun Guo

A realistic test sets compression method is proposed to effectively reduce test data volume and test application time during system-on-chip (SoC) scan testing, count compatible pattern run-length (CCPRL) coding method counts the consecutive number of the equal to or contrary to the retained patterns, it modifies the compatible code of variable-length pattern run-length (VPRL) coding rules and adds a count code block to replace original rules for increasing compression ratio. Next, the decoder architecture and the state diagram of finite state machine (FSM) are designed. In addition, the power model of test vectors is analyzed, and the power consumption of scanned-in vectors is roughly evaluated. The six largest ISCAS'89 benchmark circuits verify the proposed coding method has a shorter codeword. Experiment results shows that all compression ratios have been increased as much as possible, test data decompression is lossless, less test application time is consumed, yet the peak power and average power consumption of scanned-in test vector needs to be further improved for modern circuit scan testing.


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