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Claims  |
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We claim:
1. In a semiconductor device having a circuited portion and a plurality of
pins, a test structure as part of said device and connected to a part of
pins of the device, the test structure in use providing electrical
information concerning the circuit portion, and further comprising means
comprising a disconnectable link as part of said test structure for
providing that the circuit portion operates without degradation in
operation of the device, as compared to a device not including said test
structure, wherein the test structure in use thereof is connected to the
circuit portion, wherein the test structure further comprises a diode
forward biased in the direction from the pin at higher potential during
testing toward the pin at lower potential during testing, wherein the
disconnectable link comprises a laser programmable fuse connected between
the pair of pins.
2. The semiconductor device of claim 1 wherein one of the pins is the
voltage supply pin in the operation of the device.
3. In a semiconductor device including a circuit portion and a plurality of
pins, a first test structure connected to a pair of pins, a second test
structure connected to a pair of pins, each test structure in use
providing electrical information concerning the circuit portion, at least
one of the first pair of pins being different from one of the second pair
of pins, the first test structure including load means between the first
pair of pins, and a diode forward biased in the direction from the pin of
the first pair of pins at higher potential during testing toward the pin
of the first pair of pins at lower potential during testing, and a second
test structure including a diode forward biased in the direction from the
pin of the second pair of pins at higher potential during testing toward
the pin of the second pair of pins at lower potential during testing,
wherein the first test structure includes as a part thereof a
disconnectable link connecting the first pair of pins, and wherein the
second test structure includes as a part thereof a disconnectable link
connecting the second pair of pins, whereby the disconnectable links are
laser programmable fuses.
4. In a semiconductor device having a circuit portion and a plurality of
pins, a test structure as part of said device and connected to at least
one pin of the device, the tested structure in use providing electrical
information concerning the circuit portion, and further comprising means
for providing that the circuit portion operates without degradation in
operation of the device, as compared to a device not including said test
structure, said means for providing that the circuit portion operates
without degradation comprising a laser programmable fuse. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to semiconductor device testing means, and more
particularly, to a test structure which is part of an integrated circuit
chip, allowing testing of a semiconductor device through the device pins
thereof.
2. Description of the Prior Art
It will be readily recognized that testing of a semiconductor device
through the device pins thereof is highly advantageous. This would allow
appropriate testing of the device in its packaged environment so that
meaningful test information can be achieved. It would be also advantageous
that this be achieved through the use of an on-chip test structure which
further allows that once testing is undertaken, various parameters of the
circuit can be adjusted for attainment of optimum performance, with the
circuit portion having been adjusted (if needed) operating under normal
conditions without degradation in relation to its optimum design
situation.
Heretofore, the previous goals have not been achieved. While, various
devices include on-chip circuit elements connected with the pins thereof
(see FIG. 1 showing an input continuity diode, FIG. 2 showing an LS TTL
input structure, and FIG. 3 showing a TTL input structure, all labeled as
prior art), there is no disclosure of a test structure connected to a
circuit portion as part of a semiconductor device for allowing testing of
the circuit portion through pins of the device.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is accordingly an object of this invention to provide means for allowing
testing of a semiconductor circuit device through device pins thereof, to
provide relevant circuit information.
Broadly stated, the invention is in a semiconductor device having a circuit
portion and a plurality of pins, and comprises a test structure as part of
the device and connected to at least one of the pins of the device, the
test structure in use providing electrical information concerning the
circuit portion.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Other objects of the invention will become apparent from a study of the
following specification and drawings, in which:
FIGS. 1-3 are schematic views of various prior art circuits;
FIG. 4 is a schematic view of a first embodiment of the invention; and
FIGS. 5-11 show various alternate embodiments of the invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Referring to FIG. 4, a first embodiment of the invention 50 is shown
therein. The invention is part of a semiconductor device 48, in fact being
an on-chip test structure 50 which is part of an integrated circuit 52
which may further include a circuit portion 54 connected to the test
structure 50 and a circuit portion 56 not connected to the test structure
50. The test structure 50 is connected to a pair of device pins 58, 60, as
is the circuit portion 54, which may take the form of any one of a number
of circuit portions of an integrated circuit. On the other hand, the
circuit portion 56 is shown as not connected to the test structure in any
manner, yet of course it is part of the same integrated circuit 52
containing the circuit portion 54 and test structure 50.
The circuit portion 56 includes resistors 61, 62, 64, 66, connecting nodes
67 and 69. In parallel with each resistor 62, 64, 66 is a respective
disconnectable link 68, 70, 72, in the form of a laser programmable fuse.
The test structure 50 takes the form of a resistor 74 connected to the pin
58, a diode 76 connected to the resistor 74, and a disconnectable link 80
in the form of a laser programmable fuse connected to pin 60 and diode 76.
Pin 58 is normally the voltage supply terminal at which higher potential
is supplied to the circuit 52, while the pin 60 is normally a signal
receiving pin. The diode 76 is reverse biased in the direction from the
pin 58 which is at higher potential in normal operation of the device 48
toward the pin 60 which is at lower potential in the normal operation of
the device 48.
In the use of the test structure 50, the device 48 is in the packaged state
(the package being indicated at 51) but with the lid thereof off, while
the pins 58, 60 are disconnected from any power or signal source. For
testing purposes, a voltage or current is applied to the pin 60, while the
pin 58 is held at ground. Current flows from the pin 60 to the pin 58
through the fuse 80, diode 76, and resistor 74, the diode 76 now being
forward biased in the direction from the pin 60 at higher potential during
test toward the pin 58 at lower potential during test. If voltage applied
to pin 60 is known, current can be measured through the test structure, or
the converse, if current applied to the terminal 60 is known, voltage
across the test structure can be measured, so that the value of the
resistance of the resistor 74 can be known by the equation
##EQU1##
where .phi. equals the voltage drop of the diode 76. Assuming, for
example, that it is now known that resistor 74 has an actual value of 4K
ohms, when it was designed to have a nominal, target value of 5K ohms,
this knowledge of proportion can be applied to the resistors of the
resistor chain 61, 62, 64, 66 in series so that overall resistance of that
chain can be chosen as appropriate. That is, in the example given, since
the resistance of the resistor 74 is 20% lower than the nominal or target
value, it can be inferred that the resistance of the resistor 61, and each
of the resistors 62, 64, 66, is 20% lower than each individual nominal,
target value thereof. In order to increase the resistance as seen between
nodes 67 and 69 to the target value of 5K ohms, fuses 68, 70, and/or 72
can be blown as chosen to bring resistors 62, 64, 66 (as chosen) into
series with the resistor 61. Since the value of each of these resistors
62, 64, 66 is known as a characteristic of the semiconductor fabrication
process the target resistance overall between nodes 67, 69 can be
achieved. It is to be noted that in furtherance of this goal, whether
resistor 74 is measured high or low of the target value, the value of
resistor 61 is chosen so that at least one of the fuses 68, 70, 72 must be
blown in order to move toward the target value.
Subsequent to the testing as described above and the blowing by laser of
any one or more of the fuses 68, 70, 72, the disconnectable link in the
form of fuse 80 is blown by means of a laser so that the circuit portion
54 connected to the pins 58, 60 can now operate as part of an overall
circuit 52 without degradation of the operation of the circuit portion 54
or the overall circuit 52. This is likewise the case with the circuit
portion 56, which of course is not connected to the test structure 50 in
any manner.
It will also be seen that the above feature of no degradation of operation
of the circuit 52 would be achieved even if the circuit portion 56 was
connected to one or more of the pins 58, 60 (see dotted line connecting
pin 60 and node 68) since the blowing of the fuse 80 would disconnect the
test structure 50 from the circuit portion 56, in addition to
disconnecting the test structure 50 from the circuit portion 54 as
previously described, so that the test structure 50 plays no part in the
normal operation of the device 48.
It will thus readily be seen that the test structure 50 is capable of
providing test information in relation to circuit portions which are not
connected thereto, such as circuit portion 56, and with relation to
circuit portions which are connected thereto, for example, circuit portion
54. In either case, whether through the fact that the circuit portion was
initially not connected to the test structure, or through subsequent
disconnection of the circuit portion from the test structure due to the
blowing of the fuse 80, the circuit portions operate without degradation
in operation of the device 48, as compared to a device 48 not including
the test structure 50.
If desired, the test structure 100A, shown in block diagram form (FIG. 5)
(which block 74A may include, for example, a resistor and/or a load device
transistor), excludes a diode as previously described, and further
excludes the disconnectable link. This embodiment shows the pin 58A as not
being one designed to receive supply voltage during normal operation of
the circuit 48. In this situation, the test structure 100A is not
disconnectable from the overall circuit device 48, but still allows
appropriate information gathering similar to the manner described above.
FIG. 6 shows a variation of the structure of FIG. 5 in that the pin 58B is
in fact the voltage supply pin of the device 48 in its normal operation.
FIG. 7 shows a variation of the structure shown in FIG. 6, including the
diode 76C previously described in the main embodiment. FIG. 8 shows the
test structure 100D of the main embodiment, including the laser
programmable fuse 80D and diode 76D as described therein.
Referring to FIG. 9, this drawing shows a test device 100E similar to that
previously shown in FIG. 5 but further including a diode 76E as previously
described in the preferred embodiment. Additionally included is a second
test structure 114. This test structure 114 is connected between a pair of
pins 110, 112, one of which may be common with one of pins 58E, 60E, but
with at least one of the pair of pins 58E, 60E being different from one of
the pins 110, 112. Inclusion of a test structure 114 including only the
diode 116 (both such diodes 76E, 116 being forward biased in the direction
from higher potential to lower potential during testing) allows one to use
both test structures independently to realize and compensate for the value
of the diodes 76E, 116 (these having been fabricated to be substantially
identical through appropriate processing steps).
The principle is the same in the structure of FIG. 10, which includes a
test structure 100F similar to that shown in FIG. 10 between two pins 58F,
60F, and a test structure 118 including only a diode 120 between two pins
122, 124.
Similarly, FIG. 11 shows a test structure 100G similar to that shown in
FIG. 8 connecting two pins 58G, 60G and another test structure 130
connecting two pins 125, 126, the test structure 130 including a diode 128
and a disconnectable link 132 in the form of a laser programmable fuse 132
connecting the diode 128 and pin 126. In the case of FIGS. 11 and 12, pins
58F, 122, 58G, 125 are shown as voltage supply pins for the device in
normal operation, while in FIG. 9, the pin 110 is shown as a signal pin.
Thus, in the cases of FIGS. 9, 10 and 11, the impact on testing by
inclusion of a diode in each of the test structures 100E, 100F, 100G can
be compensated for.
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Description  |
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