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Dive into the research topics where Serge Pravossoudovitch is active.

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Featured researches published by Serge Pravossoudovitch.


vlsi test symposium | 1999

A test vector inhibiting technique for low energy BIST design

Patrick Girard; Loïs Guiller; Christian Landrault; Serge Pravossoudovitch

During self-test, the switching activity of the circuit under test is significantly increased compared to normal operation and leads to an increased power consumption which often exceeds specified limits. In the first part of this paper, we propose a test vector inhibiting technique which tackles the increased activity during test operation. Next, a mixed solution based on a reseeding scheme and the vector inhibiting technique is proposed to deal with hard-to-test circuits that contain pseudo-random resistant faults. From a general point of view, the goal of these techniques is to minimize the total energy consumption during test and to allow the test at system speed in order to achieve high fault coverage. The effectiveness of the proposed low energy BIST scheme has been validated on a set of benchmarks with respect to hardware overhead and power savings.


asian test symposium | 2001

A gated clock scheme for low power scan testing of logic ICs or embedded cores

Yannick Bonhomme; Patrick Girard; Loïs Guiller; Christian Landrault; Serge Pravossoudovitch

Test power is now a big concern in large system-on-chip designs. In this paper, we present a novel approach for minimizing power consumption during scan testing of integrated circuits or embedded cores. The proposed low power technique is based on a gated clock scheme for the scan path and the clock tree feeding the scan path. The idea is to reduce the clock rate on scan cells during shift operations without increasing the test time. Numerous advantages can be found in applying such a technique.


vlsi test symposium | 2001

A modified clock scheme for a low power BIST test pattern generator

Patrick Girard; Loïs Guiller; Christian Landrault; Serge Pravossoudovitch; Hans-Joachim Wunderlich

In this paper, we present a new low power test-per-clock BIST test pattern generator that provides test vectors which can reduce the switching activity during test operation. The proposed low power/energy BIST technique is based on a modified clock scheme for the TPG and the clock tree feeding the TPG. Numerous advantages can be found in applying such a technique during BIST.


international test conference | 2002

Power driven chaining of flip-flops in scan architectures

Yannick Bonhomme; Patrick Girard; Christian Landrault; Serge Pravossoudovitch

Power consumption during scan testing is becoming a primary concern. In this paper, we present a novel approach for scan cell ordering which significantly reduces the power consumed during scan testing. The proposed approach is based on the use of a two-step heuristic procedure that can be exploited by any chip layout program during scan flip-flops placement and routing. The proposed approach works for any conventional scan design and offers numerous advantages compared with existing low power scan techniques. Reductions of average and peak power consumption during scan testing are up to 58% and 24% respectively for experimented ISCAS benchmark circuits.


international test conference | 2003

Efficient scan chain design for power minimization during scan testing under routing constraint

Y. Borthomme; P. Girard; Loïs Guiller; Christian Landrault; Serge Pravossoudovitch

Scan-based architectures, though widely used in modern designs, are expensive in power consumption. In this paper, we present a new technique that allows to design power-optimized scan chains under a given routing constraint. The proposed technique is a three-phase process based on clustering and reordering of scan cells in the design. It allows to reduce average power consumption during scan testing. Owing to this technique, short scan connections in scan chains are guaranteed and congestion problems in the design are avoided.


asian test symposium | 1999

Circuit partitioning for low power BIST design with minimized peak power consumption

Patrick Girard; Loïs Guiller; Christian Landrault; Serge Pravossoudovitch

In this paper, we propose a novel low power/energy built-in self test (BIST) strategy based on circuit partitioning. The goal of the proposed strategy is to minimize the average power, the peak power and the energy consumption during pseudo-random testing without modifying the fault coverage. The strategy consists in partitioning the original circuit into two structural subcircuits so that each subcircuit can be successively tested through two different BIST sessions. In partitioning the circuit and planning the test session, the switching activity in a time interval (i.e. the average power) as well as the peak power consumption are minimized. Moreover, the total energy consumption during BIST is also reduced since the test length required to test the two subcircuits is roughly the same as the test length for the original circuit. Results on ISCAS circuits show that average power reduction of up to 72%, peak power reduction of up to 53%, and energy reduction of up to 84% can be achieved.


vlsi test symposium | 1997

An optimized BIST test pattern generator for delay testing

Patrick Girard; Christian Landrault; Véronique Moreda; Serge Pravossoudovitch

As delay testing using external testers requires expensive equipment, built-in self-test (BIST) is an alternative technique that can significantly reduce the test cost. In this paper, a BIST test pattern generator (TPG) design for the detection of delay faults is proposed. This TPG design produces test sequences having exactly the same robust delay fault coverage as single input change (SIC) test sequences obtained with the most efficient TPGs proposed before in the literature, but with a reduced test length and less area overhead. This reduction of the test length and area overhead is obtained by determining compatible inputs of the circuit under test (CUT), i.e. inputs that can be switch simultaneously without altering the robust test coverage.


great lakes symposium on vlsi | 1999

A test vector ordering technique for switching activity reduction during test operation

Patrick Girard; Loïs Guiller; Christian Landrault; Serge Pravossoudovitch

This paper considers the problem of testing VLSI integrated circuits without exceeding their power ratings during test. The proposed approach is based on the reordering of test vectors of a given test sequence to minimize the average and peak power dissipation during test operation. For this purpose, the proposed technique reduces the internal switching activity by lowering the transition density at circuit inputs. The technique considers combinational or full scan sequential circuits and do not modify the initial fault coverage. Results of experiments show reductions of the switching activity ranging from 11% to 66% during external test application.


design automation conference | 1992

A novel approach to delay-fault diagnosis

Patrick Girard; Christian Landrault; Serge Pravossoudovitch

The authors discuss possibilities of delay fault diagnosis based on fault simulation. They detail the proposed approach based on critical path tracing. A path tracing process is presented with information provided by a logic simulation. Due to the limitations induced by such a simulation, a reliable approach is described based on a six-valued logic simulation. It requires no delay size based fault models and considers only the fault-free circuit. This method is an alternative to fault simulation based approaches and provides perfectly reliable results. It does not require timing evaluations and can be very accurate.<<ETX>>


international test conference | 2000

Low power BIST design by hypergraph partitioning: methodology and architectures

P. Girard; Loïs Guiller; Christian Landrault; Serge Pravossoudovitch

Power consumption of digital systems may increase significantly during testing. In this paper, we propose a novel low power/energy Built-in Self Test (BIST) strategy based on circuit partitioning. The strategy consists of partitioning the original circuit into structural subcircuits so that each subcircuit can be successively tested through different BIST sessions. In partitioning the circuit and planning the test session, the switching activity in a time interval (i.e. The average power) as well as the peak power consumption are minimized. Moreover, the total energy consumption during BIST is also reduced since the test length required to test the subcircuits is not so far from the test length for the original circuit. The proposed strategy can be applied to either test-per-scan or test-per-clock BIST schemes by slightly modifying conventional TPG structures as illustrated in this paper. Results on ISCAS circuits show that average power reduction of up to 62%, peak power reduction of up to 57%, and energy reduction of up to 82% can be achieved at a very low area cost in terms of area overhead and with almost no penalty on the circuit timing.

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Patrick Girard

University of Montpellier

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Luigi Dilillo

University of Southampton

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Patrick Girard

University of Montpellier

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Luigi Dilillo

University of Southampton

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