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FPT
2005
IEEE

FPGA Defect Tolerance: Impact of Granularity

13 years 10 months ago
FPGA Defect Tolerance: Impact of Granularity
As device sizes shrink, FPGAs are increasingly prone to manufacturing defects. The ability to tolerate multiple defects is anticipated to be very important at 45nm and beyond. One possible approach to this growing problem is to add redundancy to create a defect-tolerant FPGA architecture. Using area, delay and yield metrics, this paper compares two redundancy strategies: a coarse-grain approach using spare rows and columns and a fine-grain approach using spare wires. For low defect levels and large array sizes, the coarse-grain approach offers a lower area overhead, but it is relatively intolerant to an increase in defect count. In contrast, the fine-grain approach has a fixed overhead of up to 50%, but the architecture can tolerate an increasing number of defects as array size grows. To achieve a similar level of yield recovery, the coarse-grain approach requires an area overhead in excess of 100%.
Anthony J. Yu, Guy G. Lemieux
Added 24 Jun 2010
Updated 24 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2005
Where FPT
Authors Anthony J. Yu, Guy G. Lemieux
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