Abstract

A design strategy is presented for efficient and comprehensive parallel testing of high-density, MOS random-access memories (RAMs). Parallel test algorithms for RAMs have been developed on the basis of this design-for-testability approach for a broad class of pattern-sensitive faults. Two algorithms which are significantly more efficient than previous approaches are examined. The first algorithm detects the static and dynamic pattern-sensitive faults over a neighborhood of five cells. The second algorithm tests the symmetric pattern-sensitive faults over a neighborhood of nine cells. It tests an n-bit RAM organized as a square root n* square root n array in 97 square root n memory cycles. The design-for-testability approach modifies the existing RAM architecture very little, so that it can be implemented very easily. The additional overhead is only about 2 square root n transistors. The low overhead allows high reliability, and the additional circuit for each bit line can fit within the 3 lambda -to-6 lambda pitch width in a high-density, single-transistor dynamic RAM. Although the algorithm is designed to detect pattern-sensitive faults, the modified architecture can be readily used to speed up other conventional algorithms of linear complexity by a factor of O( square root n).< <ETX xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">&gt;</ETX>

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