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DATE
2008
IEEE

A Bridging Fault Model Where Undetectable Faults Imply Logic Redundancy

14 years 7 months ago
A Bridging Fault Model Where Undetectable Faults Imply Logic Redundancy
We define a robust fault model as a model where the existence of an undetectable fault implies the existence of logic redundancy, or more generally, a suboptimality in the synthesis of the circuit. The stuck-at fault model is robust, but other fault models such as certain bridging fault models are not. A robust fault model provides a mechanism to synthesize circuits in which all the target faults are detectable and 100% fault coverage is achievable. The ability to achieve 100% fault coverage, or understand why it is not achievable, is important since the requirement to achieve high test quality translates into a requirement to achieve complete fault coverage for target faults, regardless of the metrics used to measure test quality. We discuss a robust bridging fault model and its use as part of a test generation process for a non-robust bridging fault model (a non-robust bridging fault model may have to be used in order to capture the behavior of bridging defects). We also present ex...
Irith Pomeranz, Sudhakar M. Reddy
Added 29 May 2010
Updated 29 May 2010
Type Conference
Year 2008
Where DATE
Authors Irith Pomeranz, Sudhakar M. Reddy
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