The document discusses the development of a test solution for SONET TTRN/TRCV devices operating at 2.5 Gbps. A hybrid approach is proposed that uses an LTX Fusion HF ATE platform with additional rack-mounted RF equipment. The solution includes a membrane probe card and custom fixture board to enable high-speed RF and digital testing of the devices to validate performance at high data rates and temperatures.
The D-PHY specification, since the release of its first version more than a decade ago, continues to evolve and push the envelope of throughput to support current and future needs of mobile interfaces – camera and display in particular. In this process, PHY layer test and measurement solutions are posed with newer challenges to provide for the feature additions to the specification. This presentation by Parthasarathy Raju and Suryakant Kumar of Tektronix discusses an introduction to both transmitter and receiver characteristics of D-PHY, and highlights the importance of test modes. Also discussed are test/measurement solutions to overcome these challenges and simplify the testing of devices to accomplish conformance.
The D-PHY specification, since the release of its first version more than a decade ago, continues to evolve and push the envelope of throughput to support current and future needs of mobile interfaces – camera and display in particular. In this process, PHY layer test and measurement solutions are posed with newer challenges to provide for the feature additions to the specification. This presentation by Parthasarathy Raju and Suryakant Kumar of Tektronix discusses an introduction to both transmitter and receiver characteristics of D-PHY, and highlights the importance of test modes. Also discussed are test/measurement solutions to overcome these challenges and simplify the testing of devices to accomplish conformance.
PLNOG 13: Piotr Głaska: Quality of service monitoring in IP networksPROIDEA
Piotr Głaska – Senior Product Manager at Huawei, Enterprise Networking department. Experienced in management, design and deployment of IP solutions, for 17 years worked for various companies as service provides, through the end-user, integrator, up to device producer. The Huawei Certified Datacom Proffesional HCDP, Cisco CCIE #15966 and HP MASE.
Topic of Presentation: Quality of service monitoring in IP networks
Language: Polish
Abstract: TBD
October 8, 2014 Webcast Identifying PCI Express 3.0 Dynamic Equalization Problems
Dynamic equalization training is a unique capability in modern day serial data communication. Through optimization of transmitter and receiver equalization parameters we can push the limits of serial data rates. Troubleshooting dynamic equalization problems at the Physical and Protocol layers requires testing for proper functionality and compliance.
Join Teledyne LeCroy's Stephen Mueller for this webinar to understand how to address this measurement challenge. The presentation will include real measurement examples and debugging techniques to pinpoint problems in the physical and protocol layers.
C-PHY has emerged as an interface alternative to D-PHY in MIPI camera applications. By decreasing toggle rate and increasing bandwidth, C-PHY offers systems designers more options for controlling EMI and power within a system, while maintaining high performance. However, testing C-PHY presents unique challenges, due to the need to monitor 3 lines simultaneously, as well as unique encoding and decoding methods. To address these challenges, UNH-IOL has created the C-PHY GUI tool. Similar to the widely used D-PHY GUI tool, C-PHY-GUI interfaces with oscilloscopes from various vendors. In this presentation, Paul Willis of UNH-IOL discusses the methodology behind C-PHY GUI, the challenges of building and testing it, and how to use it to easily test a C-PHY implementation.
Xilinx vs Intel (Altera) FPGA performance comparison Roy Messinger
You're welcome to check out this interesting comparison I've conducted between these 2 vendors. Very interesting and surprising results (I did not expect such differences).
Powerful tool to #analyze voice #streams recorded in PCAP files. On top of network metrics and standard E-model MOS one receives waveform analysis of all the audio streams and metrics related to reasons for audio quality degradation.
Adoption of MIPI standards is accelerating, making design verification and interoperability critically important. In this presentation, Ross Nelson of Protocol Insight discusses effective verification processes to test the physical, link and application layers and the complete system, focusing on debug, stress/corner case testing and conformance/interoperability verification. This presentation also covers effective verification processes and the new MIPI Product Registry model.
At multigigabit per second data rates and with channel flight times longer than a bit period, signal integrity is a major concern. Under these conditions, high-speed analog effects, previously only seen in high frequency RF and microwave engineering, can impair the signal quality and degrade the bit error rate of the link. This hands-on workshop will show you how use Advanced Design System (ADS) to dramatically reduced product design cycles by resolving these issues early in the design cycle. Using PCI Express serial link as an example, we’ll illustrate how you can: Analyze complete serial links by co-simulating individual components, each at its most appropriate level of abstraction: link-, circuit- or physical-level. Import S-parameter backplane and interconnect models accurately into transient (SPICE) simulations. Perform jitter diagnosis with the proven EZJIT Plus algorithm used in Agilent instruments.
PLNOG 13: Piotr Głaska: Quality of service monitoring in IP networksPROIDEA
Piotr Głaska – Senior Product Manager at Huawei, Enterprise Networking department. Experienced in management, design and deployment of IP solutions, for 17 years worked for various companies as service provides, through the end-user, integrator, up to device producer. The Huawei Certified Datacom Proffesional HCDP, Cisco CCIE #15966 and HP MASE.
Topic of Presentation: Quality of service monitoring in IP networks
Language: Polish
Abstract: TBD
October 8, 2014 Webcast Identifying PCI Express 3.0 Dynamic Equalization Problems
Dynamic equalization training is a unique capability in modern day serial data communication. Through optimization of transmitter and receiver equalization parameters we can push the limits of serial data rates. Troubleshooting dynamic equalization problems at the Physical and Protocol layers requires testing for proper functionality and compliance.
Join Teledyne LeCroy's Stephen Mueller for this webinar to understand how to address this measurement challenge. The presentation will include real measurement examples and debugging techniques to pinpoint problems in the physical and protocol layers.
C-PHY has emerged as an interface alternative to D-PHY in MIPI camera applications. By decreasing toggle rate and increasing bandwidth, C-PHY offers systems designers more options for controlling EMI and power within a system, while maintaining high performance. However, testing C-PHY presents unique challenges, due to the need to monitor 3 lines simultaneously, as well as unique encoding and decoding methods. To address these challenges, UNH-IOL has created the C-PHY GUI tool. Similar to the widely used D-PHY GUI tool, C-PHY-GUI interfaces with oscilloscopes from various vendors. In this presentation, Paul Willis of UNH-IOL discusses the methodology behind C-PHY GUI, the challenges of building and testing it, and how to use it to easily test a C-PHY implementation.
Xilinx vs Intel (Altera) FPGA performance comparison Roy Messinger
You're welcome to check out this interesting comparison I've conducted between these 2 vendors. Very interesting and surprising results (I did not expect such differences).
Powerful tool to #analyze voice #streams recorded in PCAP files. On top of network metrics and standard E-model MOS one receives waveform analysis of all the audio streams and metrics related to reasons for audio quality degradation.
Adoption of MIPI standards is accelerating, making design verification and interoperability critically important. In this presentation, Ross Nelson of Protocol Insight discusses effective verification processes to test the physical, link and application layers and the complete system, focusing on debug, stress/corner case testing and conformance/interoperability verification. This presentation also covers effective verification processes and the new MIPI Product Registry model.
At multigigabit per second data rates and with channel flight times longer than a bit period, signal integrity is a major concern. Under these conditions, high-speed analog effects, previously only seen in high frequency RF and microwave engineering, can impair the signal quality and degrade the bit error rate of the link. This hands-on workshop will show you how use Advanced Design System (ADS) to dramatically reduced product design cycles by resolving these issues early in the design cycle. Using PCI Express serial link as an example, we’ll illustrate how you can: Analyze complete serial links by co-simulating individual components, each at its most appropriate level of abstraction: link-, circuit- or physical-level. Import S-parameter backplane and interconnect models accurately into transient (SPICE) simulations. Perform jitter diagnosis with the proven EZJIT Plus algorithm used in Agilent instruments.
The final thesis defense presentation for my master's project. The purpose of this thesis was to compare alternative wireless links for transfer of data from sink motes of remote wireless sensor networks to a central repository. A few different protocol stacks to be implemented in the WSN (Wireless Sensor Network) uplink gateway and along with them a few implementation environments based on open source software and low-power hardware were discussed. To facilitate measurements and experimental validation, some of the alternatives have been implemented. Experiments have been made using two of the amateur radio bands, the 144 MHz band (VHF) and the 433 MHz band (UHF). The parameters studied include throughput, range, power-requirements, portability and compatibility with standards.
Using different protocol stacks, different bands and sometimes different hardware 5 solutions were designed, implemented, tested and experimented with. Namely these solutions are called Radiotftp, Radiotftp_process, Radiotunnel, Soundmodem and APRX in this thesis.
After the implementation phase, there was an open-field experimentation to measure the aforementioned parameters. The tests were conducted in Riddarholmen, Stockholm of Sweden. These open-field experiments helped us obtain real-life measurements about power, throughput, stability etc. Experiments were conducted in a range of from a minimum of 2 meters to a maximum of 2.1 kilometers with some of the solutions.
In the end, some of these solutions proved themselves to be viable for the purpose of data communications for remote wireless sensor networks. Radiotftp gave the best throughput in both bands where it proved itself to be difficult to develop further applications. Radiotftp_process removed the necessity for a Linux running gateway machine but it was unable to work with faster baud rates. Radiotunnel opened up the path for a range of network applications to use radio links, but it also proved that it was unstable. On the other hand Soundmodem and APRX which were based on standard and open-source software proved that they were stable but rather slow. It was proven that every approach to problem has its advantages and disadvantages from different aspects such as throughput, range, power-requirements, portability and compatibility.
A LOW-COST DESKTOP SOFTWARE DEFINED RADIO DESIGN ENVIRONMENT USING MATLAB, SI...Omid Abolghasemi
A LOW-COST DESKTOP SOFTWARE DEFINED
RADIO DESIGN ENVIRONMENT USING
MATLAB, SIMULINK, AND THE RTL -SDR
Example Design Of Receive Side Of Garage Remote Control For Reply Attack
Review Schneider Electric’s innovative and efficient upstream oil and gas offer and how to optimize remote assets. Benefit from industry expertise and live demonstrations that highlight reducing total cost of ownership and turning data into reliable information to drive business.
CEI-112G is the next wave of electrical interfaces. OIF members presented to the 2017 Design Con community on where the technology for electrical interfaces is headed.
Combining the best of Christian programs in a rural farm setting, where people can have 24 hour access to good honest work with animals and the soil, flowers and art, thus supplying a need to be needed.. In addition having chapel and a message of love, healing and forgiveness. Thus supplying a spiritual need. Having unwanted animals for them to care for and an animal hospice to restore animals otherwise about to be put down, thus supplying low risk effective level of healing in nurture and love in caring for unwanted animals, healing each other, giving and receiving pure love.
This is the Mixed signal digital test pattern macro i created. It creates hundreds of thousands of commented lines of test patterns for comparing pass fail, capturing data and making analog measurements in a matter of seconds from only a few hundred lines of my opcode/operand command sets, which cover all tyypes of patterns and die communication protocols.
This saves weeks of coding, produces good pattern compiles immediately, creates a record and good for debug with design.
This is the system i developed a ceramic filter for which had been causing it to fail. This SRM Electronic warfare system caused all of the Sam missiles to miss our pilots in the Gulf war
This is the Mixed signal digital test pattern macro i created. It creates hundreds of thousands of commented lines of test patterns for comparing pass fail, capturing data and making analog measurements in a matter of seconds from only a few hundred lines of my opcode/operand command sets, which cover all tyypes of patterns and die communication protocols.
This saves weeks of coding, produces good pattern compiles immediately, creates a record and good for debug with design.
First membrane probe card lsnowden cascade microtechLaird Snowden
Lsnowden: Worlds first membrance probe card i developed with Cascade Microtech for the AT&T longlines OC48 CDR Porobe test which i also built with RnS instruments. I wrote testes and test executive, data crons, prober control driver and logic, i also wrote my on statistics report generator software in the test executive.
GaAs PCM or WAT data to device model using Neural Network to predict device performance and yield and also target and verify device to process centering.
1. Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
Use pursuant to Company instructions
SONET Testing:
2.5G TTRN / TRCV ATE Test
Development On
Hybrid LTX FUSION HF
Laird Snowden, Jr
NETCOM High Speed Physical Layer
Test Development
2. L. Snowden 4/17/00
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BACKGROUND
• Worked on RF Wafer Probe for 1.7 GB/s GaAs Codes,
optimized Package Yield using data analysis to re-set wafer
limits and develop new tests as required.
• Developed at-speed wafer probe for Sonet 2.488 GaAs CDR
and Limiting Amp.
• Wrote RnS Wafer Test Executive for above codes.
• Developed at-speed internal RF Die Probing for FMA.
• Worked with Cascade on some preliminary Membrane Card
features during its development such as contact sense.
• Developed wafer PCM to device performance models for GaAs
wafers using Neural Networks.
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Considerations
• At-Speed Wafer Test.
• Known Good Die Solder Bump At-Speed Test.
• Short test time required.
• High Functional Pin Count.
• Variety of Pin Types.
• Analog, Digital and RF tests required.
• 2.488 GB/s Bit Rate.
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Device Test Requirements
• High pin count.
• RF VSWR test 2.488 GB/s
• Multiple Logic Levels and pin types.
– CMOS, Open Drain, CML (Current Mode Logic), LVPECL,
Analog.
• High Speed Timing tests in pico seconds.
• High speed BERT Testing 2.488 GB/s
• Low speed 32 pin digital 155 MB/s.
• Jitter testing (less than 1 pS capability)
• FEC rate 15/14 (* Bit Rate).
• Analog leakage tests.
5. L. Snowden 4/17/00
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TRCV012G5 Pin Out
• Demux
• 34 155 GB/s LVPECL Outputs.
• 2 155 GHz LVPECL Outputs.
• 2 155 GHz LVPECL Inputs.
• 2 2.488 GB/s CML Outputs.
• 2 2.488 GHz CML Outputs.
• 2 2.488 GB/s Analog Inputs.
• 10 CMOS Inputs.
• 9 Analog Inputs.
• 2 Analog Outputs.
• 2 Open Drain Outputs.
• 2 2.488 GB/s CML Inputs.
• 16 VCCD Power Pins.
• 3 VCCLA Power Pins.
• 4 VCCA Power Pins.
• 24 GND Pins.
• CML= Current Mode Logic.
6. L. Snowden 4/17/00
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TTRN012G5 Mux Pin Out
• MUX
• 4 CML 2.488 GB/s Output
Pins.
• 2 CML 2.488 GHz Output
Pins.
• 2 CML Input Pins.
• 4 Analog Input Pins.
• 2 Analog Output Pins.
• 9 CMOS Input Pins.
• 2 CMOS Output Pins.
• 36 LVPECL Input Pins.
• 4 LVPECL Output Pins.
• 5 VCCA Power Pins.
• 21 VCCD Power Pins.
• 24 Gnd Pins.
• CML= Current Mode Logic.
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DIE TEMPERATURE CONTROL
• One additional constraint is the need to test this part
at 125 degrees Celsius die temperature. This is
verified by measuring an ESD diode Voltage drop with
100 uA current applied.
• Coefficients for temperature conversion developed by
profiling the diode without power applied except for
forward bias. Self heating is minimized by reading the
Voltage drop immediately after applying bias.
• Air temperature over package is set for correct die
temperature.
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Optimum Test Platform
• Neither type of platform in current configurations met
device test requirements.
• REQUIREMENTS:
– Analog Test
– Digital Test
– RF Test
– Support for high throughput:
– Short Test Time.
– Dockable to Handler or Prober.
– Distributed knowledge of hardware.
– Distributed knowledge of software.
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Rack and Stack Considerations
And Constraints
• + High Speed RF path can be managed.
• + Custom test routines easily programmed.
• + Flexible, can integrate any GPIB bus equipment.
• + Hardware changes can be implemented quickly.
• - No Test Head for docking to Prober or Handler
available.
• - Large digital pin count difficult to manage.
• - Verification must be developed for each code.
• - Specialized knowledge required for troubleshooting.
• - Test Time not optimal.
10. L. Snowden 4/17/00
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
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ATE Considerations and
Constraints
• + Standard Platform, knowledge for troubleshooting more
distributed.
• + Optimized for high speed testing
– Known state hardware pre-loaded to minimize setup time
after the first test is run.
– Parallel Measurements.
– Driver cards close to DUT to minimize settling time.
• - Current configuration unable to generate 2.488 GB/s Patterns.
• - Most ATE Testers do not integrate analog, Digital and RF. RF
should be Sub-Millimeter Microwave range (18 GHz).
• - Fast Digital Pins needed (155 MB/s for 2.488 for low speed
side and 622 MB/s for 10 GB/s low speed side).
11. L. Snowden 4/17/00
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Rack and Stack Solution
• We first proposed developing a hybrid Rack and
Stack solution built around a low cost ATE platform.
– ATE provides
• Test Head
• DC pin parametric Measurements.
• Generic programming environment.
– Hybridization:
• Add Generic RF interface to test head.
• Add RF Rack and Stack Equipment.
12. L. Snowden 4/17/00
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
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ATE REQUIREMENTS FOR
HYBRIDIZATION
• 80/20RULE:
• ATE tester should have sufficient pin card bandwidth to carry at
least 80 % of the test load.
• ATE tester must have sufficient bandwidth in the RF path to the
test head to provide a path for supplemental RF Equipment
(less than 20% of test load).
• ATE must have an accessible and stable 10 MHz Analog
Master clock to synchronize the OEM RF Test Equipment to the
ATE tester pin cards.
• ATE must have an RF Configuration module to provide
customization for different families of codes.
• ATE must have sufficient Digital and Analog pin count.
• ATE must provide sufficient measurement speed to justify cost.
13. L. Snowden 4/17/00
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
Use pursuant to Company instructions 13
LTX FUSION HF/HYBRID
• LTX Fusion HF available with Analog, Digital and RF test capability.
– RF Path provides 16 channels (20 GHz) from the test head to the
RF configuration module and to the 3GHz ATE RF Measurement
section.
– High Speed Digital Pins (2.488 GB/s) in development.
– Standard Current Digital Pins lacked sufficient speed for high
speed side of Mux/Demux, but sufficient for low speed side.
– LTX accepted proposal to build an OEM/ATE Hybrid of the Fusion
HF, built on RF interface.
• Integrated 3 GHz OEM Bit Error Rate Tester added to the Fusion
HF for the 2.488 GB/s test vectors and clock.
• 2.488 GB/s High Speed Digital Pin Cards (HSDC) under
development at LTX.
• LTX developed phase noise technique jitter measurement to extend
jitter measurement capability.
14. L. Snowden 4/17/00
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
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TRCV012G5 Test List
• SUMMARY
• Continuity
• Leakage
• Current
• Functional
• Logic Levels Search
• Operational Tests
• Data to clock delay
• VSWR
• Generated Jitter
• AST Phase shift
• Ring Osc test
• Output parametrics
• Jitter Transfer
• Jitter Generation
• Limiting Amp sensetivity
• Limiting Amp analog loss of signal
• Jitter Tolerance
• Bit Error rate
• Number of tests: 172
• 3 Vcc levels
• Total Tests: 516
• Test time: 70 seconds
(not optimized)
15. L. Snowden 4/17/00
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TTRN012G5 Test List
• SUMMARY
• Continuity
• Leakage
• Current
• Functional
• Logic Levels Search
• Operational Tests
• Data Setup and Hold
• Generated Jitter
• Ring Osc test
• Output parametrics
• Jitter Generation
• Limiting Amp sensetivity
• Limiting Amp analog loss of signal
• Jitter Tolerance
• Bit Error rate
• .
16. L. Snowden 4/17/00
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Test Head Installation, Covers off.
17. L. Snowden 4/17/00
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10 MHz Reference
• OEM RF Equipment is
synchronized to the ATE
Tester by connecting
the ATE Analog Master
Clock to the 10 MHz
Reference input on the
OEM Pattern
Generator.
18. L. Snowden 4/17/00
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
Use pursuant to Company instructions 18
LTX Fusion HF with Manual
Contactor and OEM Rack.
19. L. Snowden 4/17/00
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
Use pursuant to Company instructions 19
Prober Dock
20. L. Snowden 4/17/00
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
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17 inch DUT Board, Top View
Card is 17 inches
to provide space for
RF Switches and
components
around the periphery.
21. L. Snowden 4/17/00
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
Use pursuant to Company instructions 21
DUT Board Bottom View, RF
Switches.
o 20 GHz RF Connectors(16) to RF-
SCM.
o RF Switches (18 GHz).
o 3 GHz Pogo pins (1000) for Digital
and Analog tester cards.
o DC Pogo pins to RF-SCM.
Note:
Number of RF pins for OEM Equipment
could be expanded.
22. L. Snowden 4/17/00
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
Use pursuant to Company instructions 22
Test Head RF-SCM, RF
Distribution Layer)
Top Cover removed.
Showing:
o RF Switches.
o RF Bias Tee’s.
o RF Splitters.
o HS Digital and
Analog Pogo Pins.
o RF Connectors
Around Perimeter.
o RF-SCM Pogo pins
(outer pogo ring).
23. L. Snowden 4/17/00
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
Use pursuant to Company instructions 23
RF-SCM Removed
High Speed Digital and
Analog Pogo Pins
RF Brick OSSP 20 GHz quad
connectors
RF OEM OSSP 20 GHz quad
connectors (lower right
corner and upper right).
24. L. Snowden 4/17/00
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
Use pursuant to Company instructions 24
RF OEM Interface Panel
RF OEM interface
at rear of test head
25. L. Snowden 4/17/00
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
Use pursuant to Company instructions 25
RF OEM Rack
RF Rack Connected to
Test Head.
Future:
Quick Connect
Interface
26. L. Snowden 4/17/00
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
Use pursuant to Company instructions 26
Aries RF Socket
• Fingers extend over 50 ohm
microstrip traces on board.
• Device is inserted, DUT pins
are pushed against socket
fingers which are in turn
pushed down over the 50
ohm fingers on the DUT
board.
• Parasitic pin inductance is
limited to the thickness of the
fingers.
27. L. Snowden 4/17/00
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
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Tronix Socket
• DUT pin are pressed against
a polyamide Membrane,
which has conductive
features patterned on the
membrane. Material has
diamond dust impregnated in
it. Contact is then pressed
against the 50 ohm DUT
board microstrip line.
• Specified at 1 million
insertions.
• Bandwidth can be increased
by reducing membrane
thickness at the cost of life .
28. L. Snowden 4/17/00
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
Use pursuant to Company instructions 28
DUT Board Contactor Interface
• 50 Ohm fingers on
DUT board.
29. L. Snowden 4/17/00
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
Use pursuant to Company instructions 29
Membrane
• RF Testing requires high bandwidth
path.
– 3rd Harmonic clock is 7.5 GHz.
– 5th Harmonic clock is 12.5
GHz.
• Circuit requires precision inductor
with less than 500 femto farads of
parasitic capacitance. This will be
implemented as a spiral inductor on
the polyamide membrane.
• Probe planarity and registration
does not degrade over time and is
not a variable. Good for higher pin
count codes.
30. L. Snowden 4/17/00
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Membrane
• Top of Membrane card.
• Core is replaced when needed.
• This is an early card from the
2.488 GB/s GaAs CDR probe
station.
• A 17 inch RF probe card is under
development at Cascade. This
provides room for RF switches
and components around the
periphery.
• Wentworth Labs can provide a 17
inch probe card with a needle
probe ring or Cobra ring for
lower speed testing capability
with the new probe card format.
• TSK prober being modified for the
17 inch docking mechanisim.
31. L. Snowden 4/17/00
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Picture of Membrane RF Launch
• RF interconnect bump to
connect core to probe card.
• Bump to connect to die.
• Semi-Rigid to RF finger on
Probe card.
Ground,
signal
ground
32. L. Snowden 4/17/00
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
Use pursuant to Company instructions 32
Eye Diargram 2.488 GB/s
Membrane Probe test.
• 2.488 GB/s eye
diagram from GaAs
CDR wafer probe test
set.
• Cascade Membrane Probe
Card.
• Anritsu Bert.
• Tektonics Sampling Scope.
• BICMOS Membrane card being
fabricated.
33. L. Snowden 4/17/00
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
Use pursuant to Company instructions 33
Membrane Contact Sensor
• Contact sensor
improves contact
consistency to assure
good RF contact.
• Membrane is spring loaded
and can tolerate more over
travel than needle probe
cards.
• Membrane Bumps are
robust and can tolerate
some degree of abuse.
34. L. Snowden 4/17/00
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
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Membrane
• Air jets have been
incorporated into the
Membrane to clean the
wafer before probing.
• It is important to remove
any particles from the
wafer before touchdown
as they can become
lodged in the membrane.
35. L. Snowden 4/17/00
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
Use pursuant to Company instructions 35
Membrane Air Cleaning Control
• Controller for Membrane Air
jets.
• The cleaning cycle moves in a
serpentine down the wafer. Air
is only applied as the wafer
moves in one direction to
minimize blow-back.
• Cleaning pressure for GaAs
wafers is set to 70 PSI.
• A sub micron filter is included
in the air stream.
• Air is turned off during probe to
prevent the risk of ESD build
up on the membrane.
36. L. Snowden 4/17/00
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
Use pursuant to Company instructions 36
Reduction of Contact Resistance for
Probing Aluminum Pads
• During probe, Aluminum from
pads deposits on probe.
• Over time, an oxide layer forms.
• As more wafers are probed, more
aluminum/oxide layers form.
• Probe resistance rises.
• To maintain low contact
resistance, circular scrub on
ceramic substrate needed during
cleaning cycle.
• Closed loop cleaning prevents
excessive probe wear.
• This method used to eliminate heavy
yield loss due to offsets on a current to
voltage PLL control circuit of the
Aluminum pad version of the Si CDR PLL
control die for the GaAs CDR.
• Probe resistances rises as
oxide layers form.
Aluminum Oxide
Aluminum from Pads
Tungsten Rhenium
Probe Tip.
Closed loop cleaning:
1 Measure probe resistance.
2 Clean when reach high threshold.
3 Clean until probe resistance reaches nominal level.
37. L. Snowden 4/17/00
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
Use pursuant to Company instructions 37
Internal RF Die Probe Aperture
Laser/Probe Station
• Three color aperture laser
for trace cutting, on either
GaAs or Si and SiN cap
removal.
• Provision for rectangular
probe card holder.
• Internal DC Probe:
– Probes down to sub
micron tip size.
• Internal RF Probe:
– Probes to 10 Micron tip
size, up to 11 GHz,
special probe for 60
GHz .
38. L. Snowden 4/17/00
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
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Internal Die Probe on Motorized
Manipulator
• 3 GHz Acitve. No ground
(pictured).
• 11 GHz Passive with ground.
• 60 GHz Passive with ground.
• Use Bias Tee to separate RF
and DC components.
• Passive Probes in different
configurations:
• 50 Ohm, unterminated
• 50 Ohm terminated
• 1:1, 1:2, 1:10, 1:20
39. L. Snowden 4/17/00
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
Use pursuant to Company instructions 39
FURTHER WORK• 10 GHz development as required:
– Explore 12 GHz OEM BERT and HSDC Digital Cards.
– Verify Jitter capability (phase noise).
• 2.488 GB/s BERT using jitter analyzer to estimate 14 sigma performance by
separating Random and Deterministc Jitter Components.
• Extract Pr pattern vectors from OEM Bert and insert into ATE pin card
memory.
• Explore Cascade package DUT Board to improve RF launch.
• Deploy Membrane Die Probe to enhance package yield.
• Deploy Membrane Solder Bump Array probe for Known Good Die Testing.
• Develop Closed Loop Membrane Probe cleaning cycle to maintain < 200
milli-ohm contact resistance (maintain Q of VCO tank Inductor). Open loop
currently used in RnS needle probe of Si CDR PLL die which requires very
low contact resistance. This uses a circular scrub on a ceramic sub-chuck
cleaning substrate.
• Explore Optical OEM Measurement Instrument Hybridization.
40. L. Snowden 4/17/00
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
Use pursuant to Company instructions 40
FUTURE WORK
• 40 GB/s and greater testing:
• Explore need to add optical interface to Membrane probe card.
• Explore recombinant photo emission testing.
• Explore Membrane test with existing technology (Coplanar
Waveguide Structures).
• Define RnS vs ATE/Hybrid Test platforms and techniques for
next generation testing.
• Develop Internal die probe techniques for higher bandwidth
codes as required for FMA.
41. L. Snowden 4/17/00
Lucent Technologies - Proprietary
Use pursuant to Company instructions 41
Acknowledgments
• LUCENT:
• Hybrid ATE: PROJECT LEAD Laird Snowden
• Test Suite definition Laird Snowden
• Test (Cadence and enVision) and NPI Laird Snowden
• Project Approval C level : Paul Tracy
• HSPL Assembly and Test Manager: Pat Reppert.
• Project Manager: Don Fister
• LTX
• Vice President, LTX: Dave Fessler
• Lucent Director of Operations: John LaFlamme
• Market Manager, Netcom: Ken Lanier
• Senior Manager, Fusion Applications Development: Derrick Dupre
• Digital & enVision Software Development: Denny Repsher
• Cadence Software Development: Brent Schusheim
• LTX Field Engineer: Steve Aikens
Editor's Notes
Hw changes, not generic, do not have to go thru committee to maintain generic compatability.