Abstract

The use of 3D-IC technology has become quite widespread in designing core-based systems-on-chip (SoCs). Concomitantly, testing of cores and inter-layer through-silicon-vias (TSVs) spanning through different layers of 3D chips has become an important problem in the manufacturing cycle. Testing 3D-SoCs is more challenging compared to their 2D counterparts because of the complexity of their design and power management issues. Also, the test procedure demands substantially more power than what is required in the normal functional mode, and hence, stringent thermal constraints during test need to be fulfilled to safeguard future performance and reliability of the chip. Since the overall 3D infrastructure depends on routing layer assignments, core allocation, and the geometry of TSV locations, these parameters should be given due consideration while designing the test-access-mechanism (TAM) that aims for minimizing overall test time satisfying power and TSV constraints. In this paper, we present a three-stage algorithm for reducing the test time in automated post-bond core-based 3D-SoCs, under a set of given constraints on test power, TAM-width, and the number of available TSVs. The proposed algorithm, when run on several ITC-02 SoC benchmarks, outperforms the algorithms presented in earlier work with respect to CPU-time, and additionally, reduces test time in many instances.

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