Year
Publisher
Journal
1
Institution
Institution Country
Publication Type
Field Of Study
Topics
Open Access
Language
Filter 1
Year
Publisher
Journal
1
Institution
Institution Country
Publication Type
Field Of Study
Topics
Open Access
Language
Filter 1
Export
Sort by: Relevance
Chapter 3 - Digital Logic Test

This chapter presents the fundamentals of semiconductor digital logic network testing. Digital circuits, unlike analogs, deal with discrete pulses known as digits. In these types of networks, discrete signals in the form of either pulse or voltage levels are manipulated as discrete quantities. These discrete quantities are the representations of logical high or logical low. The internal circuitry between input and output can be very complex. The diode structures protect the internal device circuitry from damage by static charges during product handling. The main device circuitry is located in the box named the logic circuit, which can be any type of complex structure. Functional testing is the application of a train of pulses to the input pins of the DUT and checking the outputs for their response. The input stimuli and the output sensing are determined by the logic function of the device given by the manufacturer. Hysteresis in small amounts helps the rapid switching action of internal clocks and covers wide temperature variations. Voltage hysteresis is the difference between the positive-going input voltage when the output switches, and the negative-going input when the output switches again. It has been found that the binary search method reduces the test loop to not more than eight, which, in traditional methods, is in the order of tens for a fine measurement.

Read full abstract
Chapter 5 - Operational Amplifier

This chapter describes different aspects of operational amplifier. An operational amplifier (op amp) amplifies or enlarges the input signal. At the transistor level, application of an AC voltage signal at the emitter of a transistor that is correctly biased in its active region causes a fluctuation in the collector current. An op amp is tested in a closed-loop configuration. Some form of feedback is required to set the gain and control of all the device functions. The feedback components also determine the frequency response of the device. In the fabrication of this type of op amp, only the resistors and transistors that are easily manufacturable on a chip are needed. It has been found that if the transistors are exactly identical, an increase in the collector current will not cause the output voltage to vary with temperature. The high-frequency op amp produces high output current that can drive a capacitive load or any side-effect of transmission line capacitance at the device output. In the chapter, the relationship between gain and the common input/output voltage of an op amp in terms of common mode rejection ratio has also been presented. It has been found that slew rate is the most important specification affecting the dynamic operation of an op amp and poses a severe limitation on the large-signal operation of the device.

Read full abstract
Chapter 8 - CODEC(Coder/Decoder)

This chapter describes important parameters in CODEC (coder/decoder) testing. The CODEC device is the backbone of telephone communications. The important parameters in CODEC testing are the total harmonic distortion (THD) and signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), which require the DSP process as well as the gain error. The details of an on-bench test connection to test the above parameters in single-tone methodology along with the explanation of the circuit operation are presented. The CODEC also coordinates the timing between itself and the networks with which it interfaces. Data transmission is synchronized and multiplexed. It has been found that when the encoding section receives the analog signal, the signal is passed through filtering stages to suppress low-frequency noise and the anti-aliasing process is then applied to it. A process called “companding” is essential to the CODEC's performance. Digitization of the analog pulse is not uniform, because input pulses themselves are not uniform. Companding is used to upgrade the quality of the pulse, which increases the signal-to-noise ratio and reduces the peak power to prevent overloading. The most important noise affecting CODEC design is the idle channel noise (ICN), which exists even when there is no signal traffic. It has been found that ICN occurs as a result of the quantization of a 0 V input analog signal as the digital output bounces around the assigned binary value for zero along with any nonlinearity existing along the transmission line.

Read full abstract