- AC parameter
-
A time quantity, usually expressed in nanoseconds, used to
describe a transient characteristic of a microcircuit, such as access
time and propagation delay.
- access time
-
The maximum time interval between stimulus and response
required to execute a particular function such as a memory cell call.
Access time may correspond to a device as a whole or to a
subfunction of a device.
- addressable storage elements
-
Registers that can be accessed directly, either as part of a parallel
bus or through a serial shift register chain. Addressablility for
storage elements is sometimes a desired operational mode and other
times needed for testability.
- application specific integrated circuit (ASIC)
-
An integrated circuit that is designed according to the needs of a
particular system. Since most space systems are produced in low
volume, their ASICs are also necessarily fabricated in low volume.
- at-speed test
-
A test that applies test vectors to a device at the device's actual
operating frequency.
- attitude and articulation control system (AACS)
-
The electronics of a robotic spacecraft that maintain or change its
orientation through a combination of position sensing and
yaw/pitch/roll control (attitude), and maintain or change the
physical relationship of one part of the spacecraft to another
(articulation).
- automatic test pattern generation (ATPG)
-
The creation of signals by computer-run algorithm for use with an
integrated circuit tester. ATPG signal sets (often called test vector
sets) are commonly developed in conjunction with a specific design-
for-test technique, such as scan design.
- boundary-scan design
-
A design-for-test approach for ICs whereby all device input and
output pads are designed in test mode connect together as a serial
shift register, allowing test data to be read in and read out of a
circuit while the circuit is in its target system. A popular boundary-
scan standard is IEEE 1149.1.
- bridged interconnect
-
A short between two metal lines caused by imperfect manufacturing
controls.
- Built-In Logic Block Observation (BILBO)
-
A technique used for self-test whereby a linear-feedback shift
register generates a sequence of test vectors that propagate through
a combinational circuit to a register. The register compares the
resulting value or values against a stored signature to confirm that
the circuit is defect-free. BILBO may be used in conjunction with
some type of scan logic to allow most parts of a complex IC to be self-
tested.
- burn-in
-
A test defined in MIL-STD-883 that involves applying high-voltage
electrical tests at high temperatures for long periods to detect and
discard parts that would fail before their specified lifespan.
- cell
-
A transistor-level version of an ASIC function. Cells are usually the
simplest level at which gate array and standard cell ASIC designers
design.
- cell library
-
A collection of information about ASIC cells, usually created, tested,
and verified by the ASIC manufacturer for a specific fabrication
process. Cell libraries given to ASIC designers include function and
performance information required for circuit design on a CAD
system.
- certification
-
The first of two steps (certification and qualification) involved in
becoming a supplier of QPL or QML microcircuits. Certification is
awarded after a vendor has shown that all government-specified
methodologies are set up correctly.
- characterization
-
A set of tests applied to a fabrication process, a microcircuit, or a
subsystem used to measure critical process or performance
parameters under all anticipated electrical and environmental
conditions, and to measure how changes in those conditions and
parameters correlate.
- circuit node
-
The net or interconnect between a circuit element output and all
electrically connected inputs it feeds.
- circuit port
-
An input or output "pin" of a circuit element. For
example, a two-input NAND gate would have three ports--two inputs
and one output.
- class B
-
One of two quality levels (class B and class S) for QPL microcircuits.
NASA considers class B microcircuits qualified for ground-based
systems, and some for high-reliability space systems.
- class Q
-
One of two quality levels (class Q and class V) for QML microcircuits.
NASA considers class Q microcircuits qualified for ground-based
systems, and some for high-reliability space systems.
-
class S
-
One of two quality levels (class B and class S) for QPL microcircuits.
NASA considers class S microcircuits qualified for space systems; the
only major general exception is the microcircuit's demonstrated
ability to operate in its anticipated space radiation environment.
-
class V
-
One of two quality levels (class Q and class V) for QML microcircuits.
NASA considers class V microcircuits qualified for space systems; the
only major general exception is the microcircuit's demonstrated
ability to operate in its anticipated space radiation environment.
-
complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS)
-
CMOS is a logic design style using combinations of PMOS and NMOS
transistors, such that only one transistor of each pair can switch
states at a time. Under DC or low frequency conditions, this logic
design style allows steady state current to dissipate only through
leakage. Relatively large power is dissipated only during transistor
switching at mid- to high-frequencies when there are brief periods
where both types of devices are on simultaneously.
-
component
-
Synonomous with "part." See part.
-
computer-aided design (CAD)
-
Any of a number of computer-based tools which assist a designer.
CAD tools are vital for a number of phases in designing integrated
circuits because they greatly facilitate entering, verifying, tracking,
and storing massive amounts of complex information required.
-
contacts
-
Metal line connections to transistors, to output pins, and to each
other between interconnect layers.
-
core logic
-
The portion of a circuit that implements the circuit's primary
functions. Interface logic (I/O pads) and test logic are not usually
considered part of core logic.
-
critical path
-
An interconnect line in a microcircuit design with signals requiring
strict timing behavior relative to other interconnects in order for the
device to function properly. Identifying critical paths is important to
preserve correct timing relationships as the ASIC design progresses
from logic level, through layout, to final working part.
-
current fault
-
A fault revealing a defect that causes an unwanted path between
power and ground. A test method called IDDQ testing
detects the anomalously large currents produced by these defects.
-
DC parameter
-
A voltage or current quantity, usually expressed in volts or
milliamps, used to describe an I/O characteristic such as input
voltage.
-
defect
-
A physical flaw in a microcircuit that may inhibit microcircuit
performance or that may cause a chain of events that will inhibit
performance in the near future. Defects include gate oxide shorts,
interconnect imperfections, leaky reverse-bias pn junctions, etc.
-
delay fault
-
A fault revealing a manufacturing defect or design flaw that causes a
signal to be delayed outside of its specified delay.
-
delta measurement
-
A measure of a parameter change, such as the operating voltage,
taken before and after test stress, such as radiation exposure or
burn-in.
-
Defense Electronics Supply Center (DESC)
-
An organization formed by the Department of Defense to ensure the
supply of known-quality electronic parts to government programs.
-
design verification
-
A variety of computer simulation procedures used to determine
whether a design conforms to its specification. These tools verify the
function, performance, testability, radiation hardness, and other
specified aspects of a design.
-
design for test (DFT)
-
1) The set of design techniques used to make a circuit testable. 2) A
designer's disposition to consider testing as well as performance
when choosing design strategies. Examples of DFT strategies include
scan design, built-in self test, and avoidance of redundancy.
-
detailed specification
-
A specification unique to each device, quantifying all important
parameters regarding function, performance, physical dimensions,
test parameters, etc.
-
device
-
Synonomous with "part." See also part.
-
die-attach
-
The method used to mount an integrated circuit to a substrate, most
often the device's package. Methods include gold-silicon eutectic
bonding, various solders, and conductive (and nonconductive)
epoxies.
-
die-shear test
-
A test to determine the strength of the bond between a die and its
package.
-
DoD
-
The United States Government Department of Defense
-
electronic design interchange format (EDIF)
-
A standard form of describing a circuit/device netlist
-
electromigration
-
The mass transport of metal ions in aluminum metal lines,
potentially thinning and thus inhibiting conduction paths. This
occurs when ions are pulled from their lattice sites through electron
collisions and thermal exitation.
-
electrostatic discharge sensitivity (ESD)
-
The level of susceptibility of a device to damage by static electricity.
ESDS classification testing finds the susceptibility levels and provides
the basis for assigning ESDS class.
-
end-of-life effects
-
Failure mechanisms that cause a steadily increasing rate in
degradation of a device's performance parameters, occurring
relatively late in the device's specified lifetime. These include time-
dependent dielectric breakdown, electromigration, hot carriers, metal
stress voiding, and ionizing radiation.
-
end-of-line tests
-
Tests, also called screens, that a microelectronics vendor uses
immediately after manufacturing the parts, to detect and reject parts
with defects. Many vendors use end-of-line tests defined in MIL-
STD-883, Method 5004.
-
engineering parts
-
Parts fabricated for characterization purposes that are similar in
form, fit and function to flight parts.
-
fabrication (process)
-
A manufacturing line capable of creating one or more device types. A
vendor may have several fabrication processes.
-
failure analysis (F/A)
-
1) A formalized approach to determine the cause and nature of part
failures and to recommend corrective actions. 2) The organization
that performs such work.
-
failure mechanism
-
The underlying cause of a defect. For example, a detected circuit
open (a "fault") may be caused by a break in an
aluminum interconnect (a "defect"), which in turn was
produced by electromigration activity (the "failure
mechanism").
-
fault
-
The manifestation of a device defect, detectable externally. Faults
are detected by comparing specified device parameters and behavior
with actual measured parameters and behavior.
-
fault coverage
-
The ratio of the count of all detectable faults in a circuit to the count
of those faults detected by a particular test set (set of test vectors).
The ratio is usually expressed as a percentage and is most often
associated with stuck-at fault modeling and testing.
-
first pass silicon
-
A device that works, according to its specification, the first time it is
manufactured.
-
flight part
-
A fabricated device intended for use in the final (flight) system. This
device has undergone a set of tests and screens described in its
specification that make it eligible for flight application.
-
functional test
-
A test designed to demonstrate the ability of a device to correctly
perform one or more intended functions over some range of input
conditions and internal states.
-
Gallium Arsenide (GaAs)
-
A microelectronics process technology used for high-speed
applications. Gallium arsenide semiconductors can switch faster than
silicon-based semiconductors because the material has
approximately six times greater electron mobility than silicon.
-
gate
-
The semiconductor region in a MOS transistor, located between its
source and drain regions and having the opposite doping polarity to
them. The gate forms a conducting path from source to drain when
exposed to an electrical field of sufficient magnitude.
-
gate count
-
(1) The total number of cells in a circuit. (2) The total two-input gate
"equivalents" in a circuit. Gate equivalents are used
where the cell count is misleading because a single count for complex
single cells makes an ASIC appear simpler, smaller or more easily
routable than is actually the case.
-
gate delay
-
The time required for a signal to pass through a single gate. It is
often specified as the time between which a gate input achieves a
specified voltage and its output(s) achieve a specified voltage driving
a specified load. Gate delays are futher described under various
conditions, including worst-case process, post-radiation, and high and
low temperature.
-
gate oxide
-
The thin layer of dielectric between n- and p-type materials in a
CMOS transistor. In many CMOS processes capable of building 1
micron channel-length transistors, this oxide thickness is on the
order of one hundred angstroms.
-
general specification
-
A contractual document signed between a customer and an ASIC
vendor that provides a framework for a series of ASICs to be built
for that customer on one of the ASIC vendor's fabrication lines. It is
augmented by a number of other contractual elements including a
statement of work and detailed specifications for each individual
ASIC design.
-
glassivation
-
A passivation approach using a pyrolytic glass-deposition technique,
providing a protective glass cover for a semiconductor device.
-
hard macro cells
-
Hard macro cells implement functions using an optimized layout
design, usually to achieve maximum performance and transistor
densities.
-
Hardware Description Language (HDL)
-
A CAD tool used for description and simulation of system and part
microelectronics hardware at three major levels of abstraction:
behavioral or algorithmic, register transfer level (RTL), and gate.
ASIC HDL models at the RTL level are frequently automatically
compiled into ASIC vendor's cell libraries to avoid manual gate-level
design time and improve accuracy relative to high-level system
modeling.
-
high-reliability
-
The ability of a device to continue to meet a challenging specification
over extended periods of time.
-
hot carrier
-
A charge-carrying particle with sufficient energy to pass over a
diode barrier. In CMOS transistors, these particles are electrons
("hot electrons") that cross over the semiconductor-metal
junction. Repeated occurrences of this phenomenon can lead to
device failure.
-
hot chuck
-
A fixture holding IC die or packages that can be heated for an
assembly operation or for temperature testing.
-
hybrid
-
A microcircuit consisting of two or more physically separate
electronic components (ICs, discrete transistors, resistors, capacitors,
inductors, etc), mounted on a single interconnecting substrate and
packaged in a similar fashion to individual integrated circuits.
Recently, hybrids made mostly from ICs and built on silicon, ceramic,
and fiberglass substrates have been called multichip modules or
MCMs.
-
IDDQ Test
-
A very powerful test for determining manufacturing-induced defects
involving measurement of quiescent power supply current. Many
defects change the amount of quiescent current drawn by a device,
therefore a change in quiescent current is a very sensitive detector
of defects that would otherwise be invisible until a functional failure
occurs.
-
IEEE 1149.1
-
A standard for a test circuitry bus, developed by the Institute of
Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE). It defines a serial bus with
control lines and control circuitry which allow ASICs and other VLSI
devices to be tested in their system boards (if the boards are also
designed to the standard).
-
infant mortality
-
The observed tendency for some electronic devices to fail in the first
few months of operation. In-line and end-of-line tests are used to
detect defects that cause infant mortality.
-
in-line tests
-
Tests applied to semiconductor wafers during the fabrication process
to detect defects. Defects detected in-line can save an IC vendor from
spending additional resources on further fabrication of devices which
would ultimately fail end-of-line testing or screening.
-
I/O
-
Input and Output.
-
integrated circuit
-
See microcircuit.
-
latchup
-
A parasitic effect on CMOS devices where sufficient current is
injected into a substrate to cause the occurance of a pnpn or npnp
silicon-controlled rectifier (SCR)-type structure. When this structure
forms a low-impedance path from power to ground, the resulting
high current flow can stop a device from functioning and may
permanently damage or destroy it. Latchup may be induced through
a number of ways including unusually high supply voltages and
currents induced by passing high-energy charged particles (galactic
cosmic rays, etc.) through a circuit substrate.
-
latent defect
-
A microcircuit defect that is not likely to inhibit performance until
well into the microcircuit's lifetime.
-
leakage current
-
All undesirable stray current in a microcircuit.
-
level-sensitive scan design (LSSD)
-
A design-for-test technique using a well-defined methodology that
includes two test clocks and modified bit-storage structures to
achieve high-levels of testability.
-
library
-
See cell library.
-
life test
-
An end-of-line test defined in MIL-STD-883 that entails stressing a
microcirucit at high voltage and temperature for 1000 hours to
accelerate failure mechanisms responsible for infant mortality. A
common variation on a 1000 hour life test is a 2000 hour life test
done on half the number of devices. This better accommodates most
ASIC orders, which are often small volume buys with relatively high
per piece prices.
-
linear energy transfer (LET)
-
The amount of energy transfered to an IC's active area by a
traversing charged particle.
-
logic gate
-
Physically, a logic gate is a transistor circuit which allows voltages to
pass through based on simple logic rules applied to its inputs. These
structures include logic functions such as NAND, NOR, AND, OR, XOR,
XNOR, NOT, etc. In CAD simulation, a logic gate may be represented
by its Boolean equivalent or by more complex representations which
include delay and other parametric information.
-
lot
-
The quantity of microelectronic devices built at the same time. It is
typical for an ASIC lot to consist of all parts built from a certain set
of wafers. Typical wafer sets range in size from five wafers to
twenty five wafers and are physically moved through the vendor's
fabrication facility at the same time.
-
mask
-
A thin photographic film used to transfer part of a circuit pattern to
the surface of a semiconductor wafer. A number of masks are used
in combination with various additive and subtractive operations, to
create the integrated circuits on a wafer.
-
metal stress voiding
-
The undesirable creation of voids (holes) in IC metal lines by
thermal, chemical, or mechanical phenomena.
-
metallization
-
(1) One or more layers of microcircuit metal conduction paths
fabricated over the transistor layers and separated by a dielectric,
often SiO2. (2) The fabrication steps that produce these
metal layers.
-
microcircuit
-
A circuit consisting of a number of transistors built and
interconnected on a single semiconductor substrate. The smallest
present-day microcircuit transistors have an approximate gate-
length of 0.5 micron.
-
netlist
-
A version of an electronic circuit on a CAD system consisting of all of
the circuit element names/reference designators, listed with their
input and output signal names, in a format similar to <element
name><input signals><output signals>. Netlists are the
primary form of a circuit used for CAD simulation. Schematic
versions of circuits almost always have to be compiled into netlists
before simulation or manufacture is possible.
-
non-recurring engineering (NRE)
-
Engineering activity performed by an ASIC vendor's engineers to
bring an ASIC design to manufacture. This activity can include initial
logic design support, chip layout, mask generation, test generation
and other services. The costs associated with NRE are contrasted
with the piece price of ASIC parts which are "recurring"
costs, based on part quantity.
-
oxide layer
-
A layer of an integrated circuit created to provide isolation between
conductive layers. See also gate oxide.
-
parametric test
-
A test that measures and compares an ASIC part's voltages, currents,
and timing against specified values.
-
parasitic transistor leakage
-
A transistor defect where inadvertent channel inversion causes
leakage from drain to source.
-
part
-
An active or passive device used in an electronic system. Less
frequently, a "part" may refer to other members of an
electronic system such as a printed circuit board. Synonomous with
"component" and "device."
-
part acceptance
-
The set of methodologies used to show that a fabricated device is
likely to perform according to its specification.
-
passivation
-
The technique of providing a protective, isolating coating on the top
of a semiconductor device. Usually silicon dioxide is grown to
provide this coating, but other materials are also used, such as glass.
See glassivation.
-
path delay
-
The time required for a signal to traverse through a wire between
two circuit components.
-
percent defective allowable (PDA)
-
The maximum observed percent defective that will permit a lot of
ASIC parts to be accepted after the specified 100 percent test (from
QML).
-
process maturity
-
A point at which a process requires minimum changes to achieve
acceptable yields. For a certain ASIC, a mature process is one that
has successfully produced many devices of similar or higher
complexity and has successfully built all of the cells to be used.
Caveat: a process that is old may not have desired qualitiesÑ
equipment breakdown, loss of crucial personnel, low demand, and
low volume of an older process may make it problematic to maintain
yield and, therefore, reliability.
-
process monitor (PM)
-
A structure built into a chip or wafer used for the regularly
scheduled periodic sample measuring of a parameter during normal
performance of production operations in accordance with the
manufacturer's approved program plan. The parameter to be
measured, the frequency of measurement, the number of sample
measurements, the conditions of measurement, and the analysis of
measurement data will vary as a function of the requirements,
capability, and criticality of the operation being measured.
-
process stability
-
The degree to which a process undergoes change to achieve
acceptable yield. See process maturity.
-
proof-of-design part
-
A fabricated ASIC used to verify ASIC functionality before
fabricating engineering and flight parts.
-
prototype
-
A fabricated ASIC used to verify any or all of the following for the
ASIC and/or its system: function, performance, operating limits, and
reliability. Proof-of-design parts and engineering parts are
prototypes.
-
punchthrough
-
A transistor condition where the drain-substrate depletion reaches
the source and causes leakage from the drain to the source.
-
Qualified Parts List (QPL)
-
A government standard listing of electronic parts. Also, a program
for the qualification of devices for inclusion in the list. MIL-M-38510
describes this program.
-
qualification
-
A three-step process of 1) making a specification public; 2) creating
an entity that implements the specification; and 3) demonstrating
that the implementation matches the specification. In conjunction
with certification, qualification activity is used to establish a vendor's
adherence to the QML or QPL program requirements.
-
quality
-
The ability of a device to meet or exceed the expectations of its
specification beyond some minimum period time.
-
quality assurance (QA)
-
The group responsible for verifying that a microelectronics vendor
delivers as promised. They are involved in approving a vendor's
facilities early in a procurement cycle and then comparing the actual
delivered devices with the device contract.
-
Quality Management Plan (QM Plan)
-
The plan for control of management, engineering and production
processes that a microelectronics vendor develops to show that their
facility and personnel meet all requirements of the QML program as
described in MIL-I-38535.
-
Qualified Manufacturer List (QML)
-
A list showing microelectronics vendors qualified to MIL-I-38535.
-
Qualified Products List (QPL)
-
A list showing electronic devices qualified to MIL-M-38510. At
present, there are plans to combine the QML and QPL.
-
quiescent current
-
The normally low current (measured in milliamps or microamps)
that flows from power to ground in a CMOS integrated circuit.
-
radiation hardness
-
The ability of an integrated circuit to retain function and
performance after being exposed to a specified amount of radiation.
A circuit that does retain specified function and performance is often
called rad hard.
-
radiation hardness assurance (RHA)
-
The portion of product assurance which insures that parts continue
to perform as specified or degrade in a specified manner when
subjected to the specified radiation environmental stress.
-
reliability
-
The characteristic of a device that relates its expected level of
performance to the environmental and operating conditions to which
it is subjected, as a function of time.
-
register transfer level (RTL)
-
A circuit modeling level based on the flow of data from register to
register.
-
scan path
-
One or more serial shift register chains through which test signals are
applied and test results are observed. The scan path registers may
also be used in the normal (non-test) mode of the circuit for status
registers, data storage, etc.
-
schematic capture
-
The act of entering a circuit schematic into a graphical CAD tool.
-
SHMOO plots
-
A two-dimensional plot of data, usually used to isolate failure
parameters.
-
silicon-on-insulator (SOI)
-
Microelectronics process technologies used for radiation-hardened
applications. Two types of SOI technology are Silicon on Sapphire
(SOS) and Separation by IMplanted OXygen (SIMOX).
-
silicon-on-sapphire (SOS)
-
See silicon-on-insulator.
-
simulator
-
A computer-based system used for designing and testing one or
more aspects of ASIC models.
-
single-event burnout (SEB)
-
A type of single-event effect (SEE) that causes a permanent low
resistance path between the gate and the substrate of a transistor.
-
single-event effects (SEE)
-
Undesirable effects on an integrated circuit caused by energy
transfered to its active area by the passage of a charged particle
through it.
-
single-event latchup (SEL)
-
A type of single-event effect. See latchup.
-
single-event upset (SEU)
-
A type of single-event effect (SEE) that causes a temporary change in
the logical state of a transistor input or output node. SEUs are most
hazardous when they change the state of a structure, such as a
register or a memory cell, causing an incorrect value to be stored.
-
soft macro cells
-
Soft macro cells are complex functions in a vendor's cell library built
up out of hard-wired primitive cells.
-
standard cell
-
ASIC design cells that are optimized by transistor sizing for speed
and die area. This transistor sizing requires standard cell ASICs to be
unique for all process levels. In contrasts gate array cells are built
from identically-sized transistors but require customization only at
the interconnect levels.
-
standard evaluation circuit (SEC)
-
A device used for maintaining qualification of a QML fabrication line,
it is typically a memory device.
-
standby current
-
The current drawn by an idle device while in normal operating
mode. See quiescent current.
-
statistical process control (SPC)
-
A technique for keeping a process within specified performance
limits by measurement, statistical analysis, and feedback. SPC is
often used along with Design Of Experiments (DOE) to improve yield
and provide other enhancements to a microelectronics fabrication
line.
-
step coverage
-
The quality of metal interconnect in an integrated circuit where it
steps vertically from one layer to another. Usually described as a
percentage of the flat metal interconnect's cross-section, i. e. a step
coverage 10% of normal.
-
stuck-at fault
-
A deduction about a circuit problem based on a comparison of
expected logical outputs to actual outputs. The underlying
assumption is that a gate input or output is inhibited by a defect
from switching states and is "stuck at" a particular value.
-
structure
-
The structure of an IC refers to the actual combination of logic
elements, transistors, or other physical devices. For example, a
functional description of an IC may be implemented by many
different logic-level structures and a logic-level schematic may be
implemented by many different transistor structures, etc.
-
structural test
-
A test to determine if the structure of a device is correct as specified.
Structural tests may be done on many different levels of a design or
part. Common structural tests include stuck-at fault tests and
IDDQ tests.
-
Technology Characterization Vehicle (TCV)
-
A device used for the qualification of a QML manufacturing line.
-
Technology Review Board (TRB)
-
A government-approved committee, consisting of a QML
manufacturer's employees, that internally develops, maintains, and
continuously improves the manufacturer's QML Quality Management
Plan as defined in MIL-I-38535. QML requires this group to
implement change control and to communicate with DESC and
customers about change.
-
temperature cycling
-
A test defined in MIL-STD-883 that involves exposing parts to
alternate extremes of high and low temperature. This is done to
detect and discard parts that would otherwise fail from temperature
changes experienced during their target applications.
-
test access port (TAP)
-
A set of pins, defined in IEEE 1149.1, used to implement boundary
scan and other scan test interfaces into a circuit. See also boundary scan design.
-
test vectors
-
A set of circuit stimuli (expressed either as logical 1s and 0s or
voltage levels) and expected circuit responses (expressed as logical
1s and 0s, voltage levels, impedence levels, unknowns or don't cares)
that are used to first test a circuit simulation and ultimately
fabricated devices.
-
time-dependent dielectric breakdown (TDDB)
-
The gradual and undesirable degradation of the gate oxide layer in
MOS transistors from thermal and mechanical phenomena.
-
toggle coverage
-
The ratio of the number of nodes toggled by a set of test vectors to
the total nodes in a circuit.
-
total ionizing dose (TID)
-
The accumulated amount of ionizing radiation a microelectronics
device receives.
-
top-down design methodology
-
A method of controlling the complexity of design development. Top
down design begins with the most abstract description of a system,
and breaks this into subdescriptions. The lowest level should
describe those devices purchased outside of the organization.
-
Total Quality Management (TQM)
-
An organizational management approach noted for making all
individuals responsible for improving the quality of goods and
services supplied. Activities in TQM include a rigorous program of
on-going internal organizational analysis, benchmarking against
competitors, explicit change control and meaningful progress
measurement in all areas. TQM techniques are called out in the QML
program.
-
tunneling
-
A quantum-mechanical effect causing particles to pass through an
energy barrier without having the energy normally associated with
that barrier. In the context of transistors, electron tunneling has
been observed across opens in metal lines, causing logic gates to
function at low frequencies but fail at high frequencies.
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very high speed integrated circuit (VHSIC)
-
A series of government programs designed to stimulate development
and standardize complex microcircuit technology.
-
VHSIC Hardware Description Language (VHDL)
-
A government-specified HDL. See Hardware
Description Language.
- voltage fault
- A defect present in a device that makes itself known as an
incorrect voltage level.
- wafer
- A disk of semiconductor material that forms the base on which a
number of identical integrated circuits are built. In some cases, two
or more designs may be built on the same wafer. In most facilities,
five or more wafers are brought through each fabrication step
simultaneously in a group known as a wafer lot.
- wafer acceptance
- A set of tests performed on integrated circuit wafers designed to
distinguish between wafers that will yield a high percentage of good
dice and those that will not.
- wafer lot
- See lot.
- wafer probe
- A facility that connects the die pads on a wafer to a tester and
allows one or more individual die to be tested. Wafer probing is
often used as part of wafer acceptance.
- worst-case
- A version or versions of a circuit whereby certain key
distributed parameters, such as temperature, process variation, and
radiation effects, are set to values within their specified ranges that
cause the circuit to have maximum deviation from its nominal
operation.
- yield
- The percentage of successfully-fabricated dice in a given wafer
lot.
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