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Electronic systems are becoming more and more ubiquitous as our world digitises. Simultaneously, even basic components are experiencing a wave of improvements with new transistors, memristors, voltage/current references, data converters, etc, being designed every year by hundreds of R &D groups world-wide. To date, the workhorse for testing all these designs has been a suite of lab instruments including oscilloscopes and signal generators, to mention the most popular. However, as components become more complex and pin numbers soar, the need for more parallel and versatile testing tools also becomes more pressing. In this work, we describe and benchmark an FPGA system developed that addresses this need. This general purpose testing system features a 64-channel source-meter unit, and Formula: see text banks of 32 digital pins for digital I/O. We demonstrate that this bench-top system can obtain Formula: see text current noise floor, Formula: see text pulse delivery at Formula: see text and Formula: see text maximum current drive/channel. We then showcase the instrument's use in performing a selection of three characteristic measurement tasks: (a) current-voltage characterisation of a diode and a transistor, (b) fully parallel read-out of a memristor crossbar array and (c) an integral non-linearity test on a DAC. This work introduces a down-scaled electronics laboratory packaged in a single instrument which provides a shift towards more affordable, reliable, compact and multi-functional instrumentation for emerging electronic technologies.
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Patrick Foster
National Microelectronics Institute
Jinqi Huang
Shanghai University
Alexander Serb
National Microelectronics Institute
Scientific Reports
Imperial College London
University of Edinburgh
University of Southampton
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Foster et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a024b5bc2365526cf7513e1 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-18100-3