Description

Book Synopsis
Next Generation HALT and HASS presents a major paradigm shift from reliability prediction-based methods to discovery of electronic systems reliability risks.

Table of Contents

Series Editor’s Foreword xi

Preface xiv

List of Acronyms xvi

Introduction 1

1 Basis and Limitations of Typical Current Reliability Methods and Metrics 5

1.1 The Life Cycle Bathtub Curve 7

1.1.1 Real Electronics Life Cycle Curves 9

1.2 HALT and HASS Approach 11

1.3 The Future of Electronics: Higher Density and Speed and Lower Power 13

1.3.1 There is a Drain in the Bathtub Curve 14

1.4 Use of MTBF as a Reliability Metric 16

1.5 MTBF: What is it Good For? 17

1.5.1 Introduction 17

1.5.2 Examples 18

1.5.3 Conclusion 24

1.5.4 Alternatives to MTBF for Specifying Reliability 25

1.6 Reliability of Systems is Complex 26

1.7 Reliability Testing 28

1.8 Traditional Reliability Development 33

Bibliography 34

2 The Need for Reliability Assurance Reference Metrics to Change 36

2.1 Wear‐Out and Technology Obsolescence of Electronics 36

2.2 Semiconductor Life Limiting Mechanisms 37

2.2.1 Overly Optimistic and Misleading Estimates 42

2.3 Lack of Root Cause Field Unreliability Data 43

2.4 Predicting Reliability 48

2.5 Reliability Predictions – Continued Reliance on a Misleading Approach 50

2.5.1 Introduction 51

2.5.2 Prediction History 52

2.5.3 Technical Limitations 53

2.5.4 Keeping Handbooks Up‐to‐Date 54

2.5.5 Technical Studies – Past and Present 59

2.5.6 Reliability Assessment 62

2.5.7 Efforts to Improve Tools and Their Limitations 63

2.6 Stress–Strength Diagram and Electronics Capability 63

2.7 Testing to Discover Reliability Risks 68

2.8 Stress–Strength Normal Assumption 69

2.8.1 Notation 70

2.8.2 Three Cases 71

2.8.3 Two Normal Distributions 73

2.8.4 Probability of Failure Calculation 73

2.9 A Major Challenge – Distributions Data 73

2.10 HALT Maximizes the Design’s Mean Strength 75

2.11 What Does the Term HALT Actually Mean? 78

Bibliography 83

3 Challenges to Advancing Electronics Reliability Engineering 86

3.1 Disclosure of Real Failure Data is Rare 86

3.2 Electronics Materials and Manufacturing Evolution 89

Bibliography 91

4 A New Deterministic Reliability Development Paradigm 92

4.1 Introduction 92

4.2 Understanding Customer Needs and Expectations 95

4.3 Anticipating Risks and Potential Failure Modes 98

4.4 Robust Design for Reliability 104

4.5 Diagnostic and Prognostic Considerations and Features 110

4.6 Knowledge Capture for Reuse 110

4.7 Accelerated Test to Failure to Find Empirical Design Limits 112

4.8 Design Confirmation Testing: Quantitative Accelerated Life Test 113

4.9 Limitations of Success Based Compliance Test 114

4.10 Production Validation Testing 115

4.11 Failure Analysis and Design Review Based on Test Results 116

Bibliography 120

5 Common Understanding of HALT Approach is Critical for Success 122

5.1 HALT – Now a Very Common Term 123

5.2 HALT – Change from Failure Prediction to Failure Discovery 124

5.2.1 Education on the HALT Paradigm 125

5.3 Serial Education of HALT May Increase Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt 130

5.3.1 While You Were Busy in the Lab 132

5.3.2 Product Launch Time – Too Late, But Now You May Get the Field Failure Data 132

6 The Fundamentals of HALT 134

6.1 Discovering System Stress Limits 134

6.2 HALT is a Simple Concept – Adaptation is the Challenge 135

6.3 Cost of Reliable vs Unreliable Design 136

6.4 HALT Stress Limits and Estimates of Failure Rates 137

6.4.1 What Level of Assembly Should HALT be

Applied? 137

6.4.2 HALT of Supplier Subsystems 138

6.5 Defining Operational Limit and Destruct Limits 138

6.6 Efficient Cooling and Heating in HALT 139

6.6.1 Stress Monitoring Instrumentation 139

6.6.2 Single and Combined Stresses 140

6.7 Applying HALT 142

6.7.1 Order of HALT Stress Application 143

6.8 Thermal HALT Process 144

6.8.1 Disabling Thermal Overstress Protection Circuits 145

6.8.2 HALT Limit Comparisons 146

6.8.3 Cold Thermal HALT 148

6.8.4 Hot Thermal HALT 150

6.8.5 Post Thermal HALT 151

6.9 Random Vibration HALT 152

6.10 Product Configurations for HALT 155

6.10.1 Other Configuration Considerations for HALT 156

6.11 Lessons Learned from HALT 157

6.12 Failure Analysis after HALT 159

7 Highly Accelerated Stress Screening (HASS) and Audits (HASA) 161

7.1 The Use of Stress Screening on Electronics 161

7.2 ‘Infant Mortality’ Failures are Reliability Issues 163

7.2.1 HASS is a Production Insurance Process 164

7.3 Developing a HASS 167

7.3.1 Precipitation and Detection Screens 168

7.3.2 Stresses Applied in HASS 172

7.3.3 Verification of HASS Safety for Defect Free Products 173

7.3.4 Applying the SOS to Validate the HASS Process 174

7.3.5 HASS and Field Life 177

7.4 Unique Pneumatic Multi‐axis RS Vibration Characteristics 177

7.5 HALT and HASS Case History 179

7.5.1 Background 179

7.5.2 HALT 180

7.5.3 HASS (HASA) 181

7.5.4 Cost avoidance 183

Bibliography 184

7.6 Benefits of HALT and HASS with Prognostics and Health Management (PHM) 184

7.6.1 Stress Testing for Diagnosis and Prognosis 185

7.6.2 HALT, HASS and Relevance to PHM 186

Bibliography 189

8 HALT Benefits for Software/Firmware Performance and Reliability 190

8.1 Software – Hardware Interactions and Operational Reliability 190

8.1.1 Digital Signal Quality and Reliability 193

8.1.2 Temperature and Signal Propagation 194

8.1.3 Temperature Operational Limits and Destruct Limits in Digital Systems 197

8.2 Stimulation of Systematic Parametric Variations 198

8.2.1 Parametric Failures of ICs 199

8.2.2 Stimulation of Systematic Parametric Variations 201

Bibliography 205

9 Design Confirmation Test: Quantitative Accelerated Life Test (ALT) 207

9.1 Introduction to Accelerated Life Test 207

9.2 Accelerated Degradation Testing 211

9.3 Accelerated Life Test Planning 212

9.4 Pitfalls of Accelerated Life Testing 215

9.5 Analysis Considerations 216

Bibliography 217

10 Failure Analysis and Corrective Action 218

10.1 Failure Analysis and Knowledge Capture 218

10.2 Review of Test Results and Failure Analysis 220

10.3 Capture Test and Failure Analysis Results for Access on Follow‐on Projects 221

10.4 Analyzing Production and Field Return Failures 222

Bibliography 222

11 Additional Applications of HALT Methods 223

11.1 Future of Reliability Engineering and HALT Methodology 223

11.2 Winning the Hearts and Minds of the HALT Skeptics 225

11.2.1 Analysis of Field Failures 225

11.3 Test of No Fault Found Units 226

11.4 HALT for Reliable Supplier Selection 226

11.5 Comparisons of Stress Limits for Reliability Assessments 228

11.6 Multiple Stress Limit Boundary Maps 230

11.7 Robustness Indicator Figures 235

11.8 Focusing on Deterministic Weakness Discovery Will Lead to New Tools 235

11.9 Application of Limit Tests, AST and HALT Methodology to Products Other Than Electronics 236

Bibliography 238

Appendix: HALT and Reliability Case Histories 239

A.1 HALT Program at Space Systems Loral 240

A.2 Software Fault Isolation Using HALT and HASS 243

A.3 Watlow HALT and HASS Application 253

A.4 HALT and HASS Application in Electric Motor Control Electronics 256

A.5 A HALT to HASS Case Study – Power Conversion Systems 261

Index 268

Next Generation HALT and HASS

    Product form

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    RRP £81.95 – you save £8.19 (9%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Sat 27 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Kirk A. Gray, John J. Paschkewitz

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Next Generation HALT and HASS by Kirk A. Gray

      Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 13/05/2016
      ISBN13: 9781118700235, 978-1118700235
      ISBN10: 1118700236

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Next Generation HALT and HASS presents a major paradigm shift from reliability prediction-based methods to discovery of electronic systems reliability risks.

      Table of Contents

      Series Editor’s Foreword xi

      Preface xiv

      List of Acronyms xvi

      Introduction 1

      1 Basis and Limitations of Typical Current Reliability Methods and Metrics 5

      1.1 The Life Cycle Bathtub Curve 7

      1.1.1 Real Electronics Life Cycle Curves 9

      1.2 HALT and HASS Approach 11

      1.3 The Future of Electronics: Higher Density and Speed and Lower Power 13

      1.3.1 There is a Drain in the Bathtub Curve 14

      1.4 Use of MTBF as a Reliability Metric 16

      1.5 MTBF: What is it Good For? 17

      1.5.1 Introduction 17

      1.5.2 Examples 18

      1.5.3 Conclusion 24

      1.5.4 Alternatives to MTBF for Specifying Reliability 25

      1.6 Reliability of Systems is Complex 26

      1.7 Reliability Testing 28

      1.8 Traditional Reliability Development 33

      Bibliography 34

      2 The Need for Reliability Assurance Reference Metrics to Change 36

      2.1 Wear‐Out and Technology Obsolescence of Electronics 36

      2.2 Semiconductor Life Limiting Mechanisms 37

      2.2.1 Overly Optimistic and Misleading Estimates 42

      2.3 Lack of Root Cause Field Unreliability Data 43

      2.4 Predicting Reliability 48

      2.5 Reliability Predictions – Continued Reliance on a Misleading Approach 50

      2.5.1 Introduction 51

      2.5.2 Prediction History 52

      2.5.3 Technical Limitations 53

      2.5.4 Keeping Handbooks Up‐to‐Date 54

      2.5.5 Technical Studies – Past and Present 59

      2.5.6 Reliability Assessment 62

      2.5.7 Efforts to Improve Tools and Their Limitations 63

      2.6 Stress–Strength Diagram and Electronics Capability 63

      2.7 Testing to Discover Reliability Risks 68

      2.8 Stress–Strength Normal Assumption 69

      2.8.1 Notation 70

      2.8.2 Three Cases 71

      2.8.3 Two Normal Distributions 73

      2.8.4 Probability of Failure Calculation 73

      2.9 A Major Challenge – Distributions Data 73

      2.10 HALT Maximizes the Design’s Mean Strength 75

      2.11 What Does the Term HALT Actually Mean? 78

      Bibliography 83

      3 Challenges to Advancing Electronics Reliability Engineering 86

      3.1 Disclosure of Real Failure Data is Rare 86

      3.2 Electronics Materials and Manufacturing Evolution 89

      Bibliography 91

      4 A New Deterministic Reliability Development Paradigm 92

      4.1 Introduction 92

      4.2 Understanding Customer Needs and Expectations 95

      4.3 Anticipating Risks and Potential Failure Modes 98

      4.4 Robust Design for Reliability 104

      4.5 Diagnostic and Prognostic Considerations and Features 110

      4.6 Knowledge Capture for Reuse 110

      4.7 Accelerated Test to Failure to Find Empirical Design Limits 112

      4.8 Design Confirmation Testing: Quantitative Accelerated Life Test 113

      4.9 Limitations of Success Based Compliance Test 114

      4.10 Production Validation Testing 115

      4.11 Failure Analysis and Design Review Based on Test Results 116

      Bibliography 120

      5 Common Understanding of HALT Approach is Critical for Success 122

      5.1 HALT – Now a Very Common Term 123

      5.2 HALT – Change from Failure Prediction to Failure Discovery 124

      5.2.1 Education on the HALT Paradigm 125

      5.3 Serial Education of HALT May Increase Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt 130

      5.3.1 While You Were Busy in the Lab 132

      5.3.2 Product Launch Time – Too Late, But Now You May Get the Field Failure Data 132

      6 The Fundamentals of HALT 134

      6.1 Discovering System Stress Limits 134

      6.2 HALT is a Simple Concept – Adaptation is the Challenge 135

      6.3 Cost of Reliable vs Unreliable Design 136

      6.4 HALT Stress Limits and Estimates of Failure Rates 137

      6.4.1 What Level of Assembly Should HALT be

      Applied? 137

      6.4.2 HALT of Supplier Subsystems 138

      6.5 Defining Operational Limit and Destruct Limits 138

      6.6 Efficient Cooling and Heating in HALT 139

      6.6.1 Stress Monitoring Instrumentation 139

      6.6.2 Single and Combined Stresses 140

      6.7 Applying HALT 142

      6.7.1 Order of HALT Stress Application 143

      6.8 Thermal HALT Process 144

      6.8.1 Disabling Thermal Overstress Protection Circuits 145

      6.8.2 HALT Limit Comparisons 146

      6.8.3 Cold Thermal HALT 148

      6.8.4 Hot Thermal HALT 150

      6.8.5 Post Thermal HALT 151

      6.9 Random Vibration HALT 152

      6.10 Product Configurations for HALT 155

      6.10.1 Other Configuration Considerations for HALT 156

      6.11 Lessons Learned from HALT 157

      6.12 Failure Analysis after HALT 159

      7 Highly Accelerated Stress Screening (HASS) and Audits (HASA) 161

      7.1 The Use of Stress Screening on Electronics 161

      7.2 ‘Infant Mortality’ Failures are Reliability Issues 163

      7.2.1 HASS is a Production Insurance Process 164

      7.3 Developing a HASS 167

      7.3.1 Precipitation and Detection Screens 168

      7.3.2 Stresses Applied in HASS 172

      7.3.3 Verification of HASS Safety for Defect Free Products 173

      7.3.4 Applying the SOS to Validate the HASS Process 174

      7.3.5 HASS and Field Life 177

      7.4 Unique Pneumatic Multi‐axis RS Vibration Characteristics 177

      7.5 HALT and HASS Case History 179

      7.5.1 Background 179

      7.5.2 HALT 180

      7.5.3 HASS (HASA) 181

      7.5.4 Cost avoidance 183

      Bibliography 184

      7.6 Benefits of HALT and HASS with Prognostics and Health Management (PHM) 184

      7.6.1 Stress Testing for Diagnosis and Prognosis 185

      7.6.2 HALT, HASS and Relevance to PHM 186

      Bibliography 189

      8 HALT Benefits for Software/Firmware Performance and Reliability 190

      8.1 Software – Hardware Interactions and Operational Reliability 190

      8.1.1 Digital Signal Quality and Reliability 193

      8.1.2 Temperature and Signal Propagation 194

      8.1.3 Temperature Operational Limits and Destruct Limits in Digital Systems 197

      8.2 Stimulation of Systematic Parametric Variations 198

      8.2.1 Parametric Failures of ICs 199

      8.2.2 Stimulation of Systematic Parametric Variations 201

      Bibliography 205

      9 Design Confirmation Test: Quantitative Accelerated Life Test (ALT) 207

      9.1 Introduction to Accelerated Life Test 207

      9.2 Accelerated Degradation Testing 211

      9.3 Accelerated Life Test Planning 212

      9.4 Pitfalls of Accelerated Life Testing 215

      9.5 Analysis Considerations 216

      Bibliography 217

      10 Failure Analysis and Corrective Action 218

      10.1 Failure Analysis and Knowledge Capture 218

      10.2 Review of Test Results and Failure Analysis 220

      10.3 Capture Test and Failure Analysis Results for Access on Follow‐on Projects 221

      10.4 Analyzing Production and Field Return Failures 222

      Bibliography 222

      11 Additional Applications of HALT Methods 223

      11.1 Future of Reliability Engineering and HALT Methodology 223

      11.2 Winning the Hearts and Minds of the HALT Skeptics 225

      11.2.1 Analysis of Field Failures 225

      11.3 Test of No Fault Found Units 226

      11.4 HALT for Reliable Supplier Selection 226

      11.5 Comparisons of Stress Limits for Reliability Assessments 228

      11.6 Multiple Stress Limit Boundary Maps 230

      11.7 Robustness Indicator Figures 235

      11.8 Focusing on Deterministic Weakness Discovery Will Lead to New Tools 235

      11.9 Application of Limit Tests, AST and HALT Methodology to Products Other Than Electronics 236

      Bibliography 238

      Appendix: HALT and Reliability Case Histories 239

      A.1 HALT Program at Space Systems Loral 240

      A.2 Software Fault Isolation Using HALT and HASS 243

      A.3 Watlow HALT and HASS Application 253

      A.4 HALT and HASS Application in Electric Motor Control Electronics 256

      A.5 A HALT to HASS Case Study – Power Conversion Systems 261

      Index 268

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