Xilinx V4 Single Event Effects (SEE) High-Speed Testing Melanie D. Berg/MEI – Principal Investigator Hak Kim, Mark Friendlich/MEI Ray Ladbury, Ken LaBel/NASA Steve Buchner/QSS This work was sponsored by the NASA Electronic Parts and Packaging (NEPP) Program
SEE Test Plan presented by Melanie Berg, June 26th, Test System The Device Under Test ((DUT) Xilinx V4 – LX25) controller/processor is instantiated as a subcomponent within the Low Cost Digital Tester (LCDT). –Developed by the NASA Goddard Radiation Effects and Analysis Group. LCDT consists of: –A Mother Board (FPGA Based Controller/Processor – Xilinx Spartan III) –A daughter board (Xilinx Virtex-4 LX25 evaluation board). The objectives of this DUT Controller/processor are –To supply inputs to the Xilinx Virtex-4 DUT, perform data processing on the DUT outputs, and implement user command decoding –Interface to the host PC where data is stored and preliminary analysis is performed. All tests will be performed at –Test Temperature: Room Temperature –Operating Frequency: 1 MHz- 100MHz –Vdd: 3.3v I/O & 1.5V Core LCDT Board Micro-Strip Connectors Spartan III FPGA JTAG Power Subsystem RS-232 Port Flash SRAM SMA Clock Inputs USB Port Latchup Circuitry
SEE Test Plan presented by Melanie Berg, June 26th, The LCDT Connection to the Xilinx V4 DUT
SEE Test Plan presented by Melanie Berg, June 26th, Test Facility – Heavy Ion Facility: –Texas A&M University (TAMU) Cyclotron Single Event Effects Test Facility, 40 MeV/amu tune). Flux: –1.0x10 4 to 2.0x10 5 particles/cm 2 /s Fluence: –All tests will be run to 1 x 10 7 p/cm 2 or until destructive or functional events occurred. Linear Energy Transfers (LET) : –1.2 to approximately 21 MeV*cm 2 /mg Initial Test Date: June 28 th 2006
SEE Test Plan presented by Melanie Berg, June 26th, Device Under Test Specifics 8 bit Select Map Configuration and Scrubbing is implemented and controlled by the LCDT Currently readback functionality is not completed – will be added to the testbed by the end of August Edge Triggered Flip Flop (DFF) Shift Registers are implemented as the DUT functionality –Variable number of combinatorial logic between DFFs (Single Event Transient Analysis – SET) –Data capture and output are fully synchronous
SEE Test Plan presented by Melanie Berg, June 26th, Initial Test Plan Single Event Latch-up monitoring Scrubbing will be active simultaneously with the shift register logic The following are controlled by user commands sent to the LCDT –Variable scrubbing frequencies (6 MHz to 50 MHz) continuous vs. sporadic (i.e. once every n ms) –Shift Register Architecture will be tested with and without different levels of Triple Mode Redundancy (TMR) –Data Pattern variation (static 1, static 0, and alternating) –Frequency variation (1 MHz to 100 MHz) – currently limited by interface from Mother to Evaluation Daughter board
SEE Test Plan presented by Melanie Berg, June 26th, Future Test Plan Overview Daughter board development accommodating higher speed data transfer High Speed Tester Development specifically for MGT testing Movement towards the Virtex-5 family of parts Readback inclusion – enhanced configuration memory evaluation (MBU potential and analysis) I/O, fan-out, routing, DCM and CLB Hardness Fault Injection capability added to scrubber Xilinx core testing (DSP, Power PC, etc…) SEFI Monitoring Internal memory analysis (with and without scrubbing, EDAC, mitigation, etc…) Mitigation Technique comparison and analysis Xilinx Self Scrubbing core (Single Error Correct Double Error Detect (SECDED) Based) vs. external scrubbing All tests will include Frequency and data pattern variation
SEE Test Plan presented by Melanie Berg, June 26th, Summary An Initial Test Plan and Test Bed have been completed – –Targets simultaneous high frequency functional testing and scrubbing –SEU and SEL monitor SEE Testing and Data Analysis will begin June 28 th 2006 Movement from Virtex-4 to Virtex-5 Expansion of testing capability and analysis will be implemented on later SEE Test trips Test implementation and development is currently an independent study. However, future collaboration with LANL, the Rad-Hard Test Consortium and Xilinx is our goal.