Fault injection test on mitigated benchmark circuits using FPGA

FPGAs (Field Programmable Gate Arrays) are integrated circuits with excellent reliability, flexibility, and capability that are widely utilized in various applications, including nuclear reactor control, aircraft, and space vehicles. However, this electronic device will perform incorrectly when expo...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:AIP Conference Proceedings
Main Author: Subari S.F.; Rosli N.A.; Halim I.S.A.; Hassan S.L.M.; Rahim A.A.A.; Abdullah N.E.
Format: Conference paper
Language:English
Published: American Institute of Physics Inc. 2024
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85185816454&doi=10.1063%2f5.0192276&partnerID=40&md5=576b228502db72dd4fe0af0c776a7757
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Summary:FPGAs (Field Programmable Gate Arrays) are integrated circuits with excellent reliability, flexibility, and capability that are widely utilized in various applications, including nuclear reactor control, aircraft, and space vehicles. However, this electronic device will perform incorrectly when exposed to high radiation, causing soft errors such as Single-Event Upset (SEU). In order to overcome this problem, redundancy is applied using the Triple Modular Redundancy (TMR) method. In this study, the fault injection test is applied to three different TMR designs using C17, B1 and Decode benchmark circuits. The tests were observed through the DE1-SoC FPGA board by comparing the output generated from a Golden Circuit (GC) and Circuit Under Test (CUT). Based on the resource utilization reports of the benchmark circuit and TMR design, Decode used 350% of logic utilization more than C17 and B1, thus showing that Decode has more area usage. For ten sets of 100 random fault injection tests, the average passes for C17, B1, and Decode is 49.4%, 50.8% and 51.6%, respectively. © 2024 Author(s).
ISSN:0094243X
DOI:10.1063/5.0192276