• DocumentCode
    1953804
  • Title

    Low power BIST for Wallace tree-based multipliers

  • Author

    Bakalis, D. ; Kalligeros, E. ; Nikolos, D. ; Vergos, H.T. ; Alexiou, G.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Comput. Eng. & Inf., Patras Univ., Greece
  • fYear
    2000
  • fDate
    2000
  • Firstpage
    433
  • Lastpage
    438
  • Abstract
    The low power as a feature of a BIST scheme is a significant target due to quality as well as cost related issues. In this paper we examine the testability of multipliers based on Booth encoding and Wallace tree summation of the partial products and we present a methodology for deriving a low power Built In Self Test (BIST) scheme for them. We propose several design rules for designing the Wallace tree in order to be fully testable under the cell fault model. The proposed low power BIST scheme for the derived multipliers is achieved by: (a) introducing suitable Test Pattern Generators (TPG); (b) properly assigning the TPG outputs to the multiplier inputs; and (c) significantly reducing the test set length with respect to earlier schemes; Our results indicate that the total power dissipated during test can be reduced from 64.8% to 72.8%, while the average power per test vector can be reduced from 19.6% to 27.4% and the peak power dissipation can be reduced from 16.8% to 36.0%, depending on the implementation of the basic cells and the size of the multiplier. The test application time is also significantly reduced, while the introduced BIST scheme implementation area is small
  • Keywords
    CMOS logic circuits; automatic test pattern generation; built-in self test; design for testability; digital arithmetic; integrated circuit design; integrated circuit testing; logic testing; low-power electronics; multiplying circuits; Booth encoding; TPG outputs; Wallace tree summation; Wallace tree-based multipliers; built in self test scheme; cell fault model; design rules; low power BIST scheme; partial products; peak power dissipation reduction; test application time reduction; test pattern generators; test set length reduction; testability; total power dissipation reduction; Automatic testing; Built-in self-test; Circuit testing; Costs; Informatics; Power dissipation; Power engineering and energy; Power engineering computing; Switching circuits; Tellurium;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Quality Electronic Design, 2000. ISQED 2000. Proceedings. IEEE 2000 First International Symposium on
  • Conference_Location
    San Jose, CA
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7695-0525-2
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ISQED.2000.838914
  • Filename
    838914