Practical Instrumentation Integration Considerations
Author(s) -
Thomas J. Anderson
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
2004 international conferce on test
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Book series
ISBN - 0-7803-8581-0
DOI - 10.1109/itc.2004.143
As complexities of ICs and systems increase, new test methodologies are developed (BIST, SCAN, etc.) to keep test times and costs minimized. However, these methodologies do not address some measurement concerns (DC and AC parametric tests, special functionality, etc.). For example, as manufacturers shrink processes from 130nm to 90nm, significant signal integrity problems have occurred and need to be tested or characterized. Hence, integration of additional instrumentation into the test platform is a suitable option. Integrating instrumentation into existing ATE is not as easy as simply connecting, programming, and testing. Signal integrity affected by resistive/capacitive loading, connections, bandwidth, and phase matching; accessibility to references for calibration, verification, and diagnostics; thermal drift; and MTBF are all issues that must be considered to insure a trouble-free integration.
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