The present invention relates to production test requirement for timing delay fault (TDF) testing for RapidChip and ASIC devices.
Traditional stuck-at fault testing is no longer adequate to meet expectations for product quality levels. As such, TDF testing has become a requirement for any and all product applications for which product quality is of utmost concern, e.g. storage components. The specific problem with regard to TDF testing is that most production test systems cannot exceed a 200 Mhz effective TDF test rate. With 130 nm technology ramping up, and 90 nm technology on the horizon, the 200 Mhz test rate is not adequate to detect TDF-type failures. A higher speed solution is needed on these existing tester platforms, without having to spend significant capital resources to upgrade to newer tester platforms.
The only real existing solution to the aforementioned problem is to purchase newer tester platforms that can support test frequencies well beyond the current 200 Mhz limitation. The capital expenditures required for such a solution are not feasible.
An object of an embodiment of the present invention is to provide a higher speed solution for use with existing tester-platforms, without having to spend significant capital resources to upgrade to newer tester platforms.
One embodiment of the present invention provides a solution to the aforementioned TDF test problem by adding circuitry to the test hardware used to interface to the device-under-test (DUT). The circuitry consists of a simple XOR gate which is driven by two tester channels. The output of this XOR is then buffered to match the input levels expected by the DUT clock input pin. Multiple XOR gates could be added to the DUT test hardware as needed.
Since this solution can be accomplished with circuitry added to the DUT test hardware, no modifications to the actual silicon design are required. Therefore the solution can be implemented for existing products via redesigning the DUT hardware to accommodate the described solution. The costs associated with the hardware design are nominal, and at a minimum the new test hardware can provide a 400 Mhz launch/capture clock sequence for TDF testing.
Another embodiment of the present invention provides a solution to the aforementioned TDF test problem by adding circuitry to the actual design prior to releasing it for processing. As such it will require only a single clock pulse from the automated test equipment (ATE) in order to be able to generate the necessary high-speed two pulse clock stream required for TDF launch/capture operations. The circuitry consists of a simple XOR gate which is driven by the original clock pulse generated by the ATE and a delayed version of that same clock signal. The output of this XOR is then buffered and supplied to the clock circuit which drives the test logic on the device.
Since the logic to generate the high-speed clock pulses is implemented on the actual device to be tested, the maximum frequency which can be generated is theoretically only limited by the performance of the process technology associated with the design. In practice, the maximum frequency which can be generated will be more than sufficient to provide the needed TDF test coverage.
The organization and manner of the structure and operation of the invention, together with further objects and advantages thereof, may best be understood by reference to the following description, taken in connection with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
While the invention may be susceptible to embodiment in different forms, there are shown in the drawings, and herein will be described in detail, specific embodiments of the invention. The present disclosure is to be considered an example of the principles of the invention, and is not intended to limit the invention to that which is illustrated and described herein.
A first embodiment of the present invention provides a solution to the aforementioned TDF test problem by adding circuitry 10 to the test hardware used to interface to the device-under-test (DUT). As shown in
The high-speed clock signals needed by the DUT to perform the TDF testing are generating by supplying two separate clock pulses (14 and 16 in
For the 200 Mhz maximum frequency tester mentioned hereinabove, the minimum pulse width that can be generated by a given tester channel is 2.5 ns. The XOR circuit 10 shown in
The primary feature of the first embodiment of the present invention is its ability to provide two consecutive high-speed clock pulses (400 Mhz on a 200 Mhz tester using two tester channels) to be used as launch/capture clocks for TDF testing. The example described hereinabove uses only two tester channels to generate the high-speed clock pulse stream required for the launch/capture sequence required for TDF testing. This could be expanded (as represented by dots 24 in
Since the solution according to the first embodiment is accomplished with circuitry 10 added to the DUT test hardware, no modifications to the actual silicon design are required. Therefore, the solution can be implemented for existing products via redesigning the DUT hardware to accommodate the described solution. The costs associated with the hardware design are nominal, and at a minimum the new test hardware can provide a 400 Mhz launch/capture clock sequence for TDF testing.
A second embodiment of the present invention provides a solution to the aforementioned TDF test problem by adding circuitry 50 to the actual design prior to releasing it for processing. As such it will require only a single clock pulse 52 from the automated test equipment (ATE) in order to be able to generate the necessary high-speed two pulse clock stream required for TDF launch/capture operations. As shown in
The ‘Delay/Mux Circuit’ 64 (i.e., delay/multiplexer circuit) shown in
For the 200 Mhz maximum frequency tester mentioned hereinabove, the minimum pulse width that can be generated by a given tester channel is 2.5 ns. The circuit 50 shown in
The primary feature of the second embodiment of the present invention is its ability to provide two consecutive high-speed clock pulses using a single tester channel to be used as launch/capture clocks for TDF testing.
Since the logic to generate the high-speed clock pulses is implemented on the actual device to be tested, the maximum frequency which can be generated is theoretically only limited by the performance of the process technology associated with the design. In practice, the maximum frequency which can be generated will be more than sufficient to provide the needed TDF test coverage. Any test application which requires consecutive high-speed clock pulses could use this approach to testing.
Both solutions discussed hereinabove provide a higher speed solution for use with existing tester platforms, without having to spend significant capital resources to upgrade to newer tester platforms.
While embodiments of the present invention are shown and described, it is envisioned that those skilled in the art may devise various modifications of the present invention without departing from the spirit and scope of the appended claims.