Multiple scan chain design for two-pattern testing

Author(s):  
I. Polian ◽  
B. Becker
2011 ◽  
Vol 301-303 ◽  
pp. 989-994
Author(s):  
Fei Wang ◽  
Da Wang ◽  
Hai Gang Yang

Scan chain design is a widely used design-for-testability (DFT) technique to improve test and diagnosis quality. However, failures on scan chain itself account for up to 30% of chip failures. To diagnose root causes of scan chain failures in a short period is vital to failure analysis process and yield improvements. As the conventional diagnosis process usually runs on the faulty free scan chain, scan chain faults may disable the diagnostic process, leaving large failure area to time-consuming failure analysis. In this paper, a SAT-based technique is proposed to generate patterns to diagnose scan chain faults. The proposed work can efficiently generate high quality diagnostic patterns to achieve high diagnosis resolution. Moreover, the computation overhead of proving equivalent faults is reduced. Experimental results on ISCAS’89 benchmark circuits show that the proposed method can reduce the number of diagnostic patterns while achieving high diagnosis resolution.


Author(s):  
A. Zjajo ◽  
Henk Jan Bergveld ◽  
R. Schuttert ◽  
J. Pineda de Gyvez
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Chia Ling Kong ◽  
Mohammed R. Islam

Abstract Precise isolation and resolution of scan chain defects are more critical than ever due to increased reliance on scan-based design to achieve desired test content. At the same time, its diagnosis is becoming more difficult as product design increases in complexity alongside shrinking fabrication processes. In this paper, we present a new scan chain diagnosis procedure that is centered on Load Pass Unload Fail/Load Fail Unload Pass (LPUF/LFUP) and Scan Shift Logic State Mapping (SSLSM) techniques to isolate both stuck-at and timing scan chain faults without the design overhead and defect assumptions of previously proposed methods. More importantly, this procedure is extended to analyze scan chain with multiple defects, which is becoming a more frequent occurrence as process scales down in size.


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