Design of Low Power and High Fault Coverage Test Pattern Generator for BIST
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Abstract
Low Power consumption has become increasingly important in hand-held
communication systems and battery operated equipment, such as laptop computers,
audio and video-based multimedia products, and cellular phones. For this new class of
battery-powered devices, the energy consumption is a critical design issue since it
determines the lifetime of the batteries. Thereby, the reduction of the energy
consumption is becoming one of the most growing topics of interest in the electronics
industry and one of the most challenging areas of research in this domain.
In the same time, modern design and package technologies make external
testing more and more difficult, and built-in self test (BIST) has emerged as a
promising solution to the VLSI testing problem. BIST is a design for testability
methodology aimed at detecting faulty components in a system by incorporating test
logic on-chip. BIST is well known for its numerous advantages such as improved
testability, at-speed test of modules, no need for automatic test equipment, and support
during system maintenance. Moreover, with the emergence of core-based “system-ona-
chip” designs, BIST represents one of the most favourable testing methods since it
allows preserving the intellectual property of the design.
A new low power test pattern generator using a linear feedback shift register
(LFSR), called LP-TPG, is presented to reduce the average and peak power of a circuit
during test. The correlation between the test patterns generated by LP-TPG is more
than conventional LFSR. LP-TPG inserts intermediate patterns between the random
patterns. The goal of having intermediate patterns is to reduce the transitional activities
of primary inputs which eventually reduces the switching activities inside the circuit
under test, and hence, power consumption. The random nature of the test patterns is
kept intact. The area overhead of the additional components to the LFSR is negligible
compared to the large circuit sizes. The experimental results are shown for ISCAS85
benchmarks, confirming up to 63% and 27% reduction in average and peak power,
respectively.
Description
M.Tech. (VLSI Design and CAD)
