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Chapter 3 DC and Parametric Measurements

Chapter 3 DC and Parametric Measurements. Continuity Purpose of Continuity Testing ATE to Test Head connection. Purpose of Continuity Testing Electromechanical relays. Continuity Continuity Test Technique On chip protection diodes

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Chapter 3 DC and Parametric Measurements

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  1. Chapter 3 DC and Parametric Measurements

  2. Continuity • Purpose of Continuity Testing • ATE to Test Head connection

  3. Purpose of Continuity Testing • Electromechanical relays

  4. Continuity • Continuity Test Technique • On chip protection diodes • Protect input and output from Electrostatic Discharge (ESD) and other overvoltage • Pins have either one or two reverse biased diodes

  5. Continuity • Continuity Test Technique • Force current - measure voltage • DUT power supplies are grounded • Current level is usually between 100uA and 1mA • Diodes connected to the positive supply - current forced in • Diodes connected to the negative supply - current forced out • Output diode voltage drop usually is between 550mV and 750mV • If tester does not see diode voltage drop or the current reaches its voltage clamp, the test fails

  6. Continuity • Serial vs. Parallel Continuity Testing • Serial is one pin at a time • Test time intensive • Parallel can not see pin to pin shorts • Alternating odd and even pin parallel test • Analog parallel per-pin measurement is not available in some testers • Single current source and volt meter can be used one pin at a time • Digital per-pin measurement is available, but may introduce noise into sensitive analog circuit

  7. Leakage Currents • Purpose of Leakage Testing • Good design should have leakage current of less than 1uA • Detects poorly processed integrated circuits • Improper operation in customer end application • Detect weak devices • Initially function but eventually fail after unacceptably short lifetime (Infant mortality)

  8. Leakage Currents • Leakage Test Technique • Force DC voltage - measure small current • Typically measured twice • input voltage equal to positive supply • input voltage set to ground or negative supply • Input current high (IIH) and input current low (IIL) • Digital and analog inputs • Output leakage current (IOZ) • Measured same as IIH & IIL • output pin must be placed in a high impedance (HIZ) state using test modes

  9. Leakage Currents • Serial vs. Parallel Leakage Testing • Serial is one pin at a time • Test time intensive • Less possibility of errors • Leakage currents can flow from pin to pin • Alternating odd and even pin parallel test is recommended • Again, analog parallel per-pin measurement is not available in some testers • Single voltage source and current meter can be used one pin at a time • Again, digital per-pin measurement is available, but may introduce noise into sensitive analog circuit

  10. Power Supply Currents • Importance of Supply Current Tests • Fast method for determining catastrophic failure • Large current draw from power supplies • Tests are run early in test protocol to weed out defective chips without wasting valuable test time • Customer specific application characteristic • Battery operated instruments like a cellular phone require minimal current draw by electronics

  11. Power Supply Currents • Test Techniques • Basic test is simple • Testers have the ability to measure current draw from power supplies (Idd and Icc) • Actual test is never basic • Test conditions • must be clearly identified in test plan • power up mode, standby mode, normal operational mode • digital supply (Iddd and Iccd) and analog supply (Idda and Icca) measured separately • Worst case • requires complete characterization

  12. Test Techniques - cont. • Multiple power supply pins • designers may need to know the current flow into each pin • Settling time • 5 to 10 milliseconds in active mode • hundreds of milliseconds to stabilize to within 1mA

  13. DC References and Regulators • Voltage Regulators • High voltage input - regulated lower voltage output • Output voltage • simple voltmeter reading • Output voltage regulation • ability of regulator to maintain specific output under load • Dropout voltage • minimum input voltage before output drops below specified level • Input regulation • ability of regulator to maintain steady output with a range of input voltages

  14. DC References and Regulators • Voltage References • Low power voltage regulators • Not always accessible from external pin • test engineer may need to request test modes to test references • May not have a separate specification in the data sheet • DC reference test modes allow the program to trim the DC references for more precise device operation

  15. DC References and Regulators • Trimmable References • Allows quality of product to be enhanced during testing through fuses internal to the device • The only aspect of testing that adds value to the device • Fuses, Zener diodes or EEPROM register bits • Fuses and Zener diodes are blown by forcing a controlled current through them • fuses blow to an open circuit • diodes blow to a short circuit • Laser trimming - (only possible on wafer) • On-Chip resistor are trimmed to increase resistance • Also used to trim gain and offset of analog circuits • Trimming is sometimes performed after packaging to account for packaging effects

  16. Impedance Testing • Input Impedance • Very common specification for analog inputs • Force two voltages - measure differences in current • single voltage / current is not sufficient to eliminate bias current and unknown termination voltages • data sheet will list the appropriate range for voltage • Input impedance is equal to change in voltage divided by the change in current • Alternative method: force two controlled currents and measure the voltages • used in cases where low input impedance would cause excessive current flow into the device • data sheet will list the appropriate ranges of current

  17. Impedance Testing • Output Impedance • Typically much lower than input impedance • Measured with a force current measure voltage method • Differential Impedance Measurements • Force two differential voltages and measure the differential current change

  18. DC Offset Measurements • Output Offset Voltage • The difference between the devices ideal output voltage and its actual output voltage • Basic test is fairly simple • Difficulties • AC components or noise riding on the DC signal • Requires filtering • analog low pass filter • digital averaging which functions like a low pass filter • ATE parasitic capacitance • causes some op amps to oscillate • may need a buffer amplifier

  19. DC Offset Measurements • Input Offset Voltage • Output offset voltage referenced back to its input • Input offset voltage divided by the gain of the circuit • definition assumes that the offset is all attributed to the input, when in reality, the offset could be caused by internal factors as well • Single Ended, Differential, and Common Mode Offsets • Single ended offsets are measured relative to ideal voltage • Differential offset is the difference between two outputs of a differential circuit. • Common mode offset is the average voltage level at two outputs of a differential circuit compared to an ideal common mode voltage

  20. DC Gain Measurements • Closed Loop Gain • Single input • Change in output divided by the change in input • Use a voltmeter to measure output • input should be stable to within 1mV • may need testers high accuracy voltmeter to measure the values • Differential input • Change in differential output divided by change in differential input • DC offsets at the input are cancelled out • Use a differential voltmeter

  21. DC Gain Measurements • Open Loop Gain • Defined as the amplifier gain with no feedback path from the output to the input. • Difficult to test since op amp gains can be very high • measured using a second op amp in the feedback path • nulling amplifier can also be used to measure the input offset voltage

  22. DC Power Supply Rejection Ratio • DC Power Supply Sensitivity (PSS) • Measure of the ability of a circuit to maintain a steady output voltage while the power supply voltage changes slightly

  23. DC Power Supply Rejection Ratio • DC Power Supply Rejection Ratio (PSRR) • PSS of the circuit divided by the gain of the circuit in its normal mode of operation • PSRR|db = 20 log PSS/|G|

  24. DC Common Mode Rejection Ratio • CMRR of Op Amps • A differential circuit’s ability to reject a common mode signal at its inputs • There are two circuits used to measure CMRR • Resistor matching is a major source of error.

  25. Op amp CMRR Test Setup

  26. CMRR Test Setup using Nulling Amplifier

  27. DC Common Mode Rejection Ratio • CMRR of Differential Gain Stages • Circuits that use op amps to perform a function • The CMRR of the op amp is not as critical as the CMRR of the circuit. • Resistor matching is critical in these circuits • Difference between chip CMRR and circuit CMRR? • Chip CMRR - the resistors are on the DIB. • Circuit CMRR - the resistors are on the DUT.

  28. CMRR of Differential Gain Stages

  29. Comparator DC Tests • Input Offset Voltage • Differential input voltage the causes a comparator to switch from one output state to the other. • Differential input voltage is ramped from one voltage to another to find the point at which the comparator changes state.

  30. Comparator DC Tests • Threshold Voltage • Slicer circuit • Fixed reference voltage supplied to one input of a comparator • The input offset voltage is replaced by the single-ended specification, threshold voltage

  31. Comparator DC Tests • Hysteresis • The difference in threshold voltage between a rising input test condition and a falling input condition • May or may not be a design feature • Input offset voltage and hysteresis may change with different common mode input voltages

  32. Voltage Search Techniques • Binary Searches vs. Step Searches • Ramping input voltages until an output condition is met is called a ramp or step search. • Very time consuming, not well suited for production testing. • Binary searches use successive approximation algorithms • If you are looking for a transition between 1.45V and 1.55V, the comparator input is set to 1.5V and the output is observed. If the output is high, then the input is increased by one quarter of the 100 mV search range (25mV) to try to make the output go low. Once the output goes low, the input is adjusted by one eighth of the search range (12.5mV) and the process is repeated until the desired resolution is attained. • Does not work well in the presence of hysteresis.

  33. Voltage Search Techniques • Linear Searches • Very fast • Using two input values, two output values can be measured. • Using the linear equation: y = m * x + b, the zero crossing values can be calculated. • Iterative linear searches are used to achieve the desired accuracy.

  34. DC Tests for Digital Circuits • IIH / IIL • Mentioned earlier under leakage currents • Data sheets list several specification for digital inputs and outputs • Digital I/O lines can also have input leakage specifications when they are set in a high impedance (HIZ) mode. • VIH / VIL (input high voltage and low voltage) • Threshold voltage for digital inputs • Tested using a binary or step search • Force levels as a go-nogo test • to identify VIH / VIL threshold failures, rerunning the go-nogo test at a looser test limit will reveal the failure.

  35. DC Tests for Digital Circuits • VOH / VOL • VOH is the minimum output voltage in the high state • VOL is the maximum output voltage in the low state • Usually a verified value not a measured value • Tested using a go-nogo test • IOH / IOL • VOH and VOL are guaranteed with specified load currents (IOH and IOL) • When output is high, the tester must pull current out of the DUT. • When the output is low, the tester must force current into the DUT.

  36. DC Tests for Digital Circuits • IOSH and IOSL Short Circuit Current • Digital outputs often have output short circuit protection • If the output is shorted directly to ground or to power, the amount of current flowing into or out of the pin is limited to IOSH and IOSL

  37. Summary • DC tests are very easy to define and understand • Actual testing is usually much more difficult than it looks. • A DC offset of 100mV is easy to measure with an accuracy of +/- 10mV - very difficult to measure with an accuracy of 1uV. • Accuracy and repeatability are often the most time consuming problems faced by an analog test engineer.

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