Experimental Validation of a Resilient Electronic Logic Design with Autonomous Fault Discrimination/Masking
Author(s) -
Richard McWilliam,
Philipp Schiefer,
Alan Purvis
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
procedia cirp
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.683
H-Index - 65
ISSN - 2212-8271
DOI - 10.1016/j.procir.2015.08.027
Subject(s) - fault coverage , fault injection , stuck at fault , automatic test pattern generation , fault detection and isolation , fault (geology) , modular design , computer science , embedded system , fault model , nand gate , overhead (engineering) , engineering , electronic engineering , logic gate , electronic circuit , electrical engineering , artificial intelligence , software , seismology , geology , actuator , programming language , operating system
This paper presents the experimental validation of a novel fault-tolerant electronic logic design conducted by an automated mixed-signal fault injection procedure. The design under evaluation relies upon a novel redundant design strategy intended to provide fault discrimination and selective fault masking embedded within a functional CMOS NAND gate. The traditional logic layout is modified to include fault detection and reporting at an extremely fine-grained design level with 2x overhead as opposed to the traditional 4x overhead. The fault injection test bench procedure requires automated fault injection, programmable fault load conditions and combined analogue/digital domain verification. The device under test is implemented using discrete n- and p-FETs arranged as a modular test board together with automated fault injection and test lines. The fault response is measured and confirms the predicted intrinsic fault rate of 25% with a successful 100% masking of suck low-faults and precise identification of stuck-high via IDDQ trigger. The test procedure is shown to be extensible towards more complex logic unit designs and for evaluation of multiple simultaneous faults
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