Publication | Closed Access
Quiescent power supply current measurement for CMOS IC defect detection
145
Citations
17
References
1989
Year
ReliabilityElectrical EngineeringParasitic Transistor LeakageEngineeringHardware ReliabilityPower IcQuiescent Power SupplyTest SetComputer EngineeringBuilt-in Self-testCircuit ReliabilityInstrumentationMicroelectronicsDesign For TestingSilicon Debugging
Quiescent power supply current (I/sub DDQ/) measurement is a very effective technique for detecting in CMOS integrated circuits (ICs). This technique uniquely detects certain CMOS IC defects such as gate oxide shorts, defective p-n junctions, and parasitic transistor leakage. In addition, I/sub DDQ/ monitoring will detect all stuck-at faults with the advantage of using a node toggling test set that has fewer test vectors than a stuck-at test set. Individual CMOS ICs from three different fabrication sites had a unique pattern or fingerprint of elevated I/sub DDQ/ states for a given test set. When I/sub DDQ/ testing was added to conventional functional test sets, the percentage increase in failures ranged from 60% to 182% for a sample of microprocessor, RAM, and ROM CMOS ICs.< <ETX xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">></ETX>
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