INVESTIGATION OF LOGIC CIRCUIT COMPLEXES. RELIABILITY AND FAULT MASKING IN HOMOGENEOUS LOGICAL SYSTEMS.

Abstract

The current study continues the comparison of quadded and restored trees. Explicit equations were derived for computing the signal-state reliability which is defined as the probability of correct output for a given function and a given assignment of values to the variables averaged over all variable assignments and all functions. An investigation was made of a new logical structure composed uniformly of diodes. We call the structure a v sub q-module. The v sub q-module, like the micro sub q-module, is capable of executing all functions of q variables. Function selection is also made by applying constant signals to the 2 super scrip q boundary control lines and failure of any component results in the improper execution of at least one of the 2 superscrip 2q functions. The tree which executes all functions of n variables is built out of v sub q-modules and v sub r-modules, where n = pq + r for some p, and is called the n-variable (q+l)-input AND-OR tree. An optimization study was made to find the q and r for a given n which result in the most reliable n-variable AND-OR tree. Three failure models of the diode were studied and for each a redundance scheme is introduced which renders any homogeneous logic structure composed of diodes arbitrarily reliable. If the diode is open with probability alpha, we replace it by m diodes in parallel. If the diode shorts with probability beta, we replace it by m diodes in parallel. If the diode is open with probability alpha and shorted with probability beta, then it is replaced by a series-parallel or parallel-series array of diodes.

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Apr 15, 1966
Accession Number
AD0483765

Entities

People

  • Bernard Kolman
  • Marion S. Dunning

Organizations

  • Sperry Corporation

Tags

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Boundaries
  • Circuits
  • Equations
  • Logic
  • Logic Gates
  • Mathematics
  • Optimization
  • Probability
  • Reliability

Readers

  • Applied Combinatorial Optimization and Logic Circuit Design.
  • Graph Algorithms and Convex Optimization.
  • Optical Physics and Photonics.