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Electronics for RICH Detectors Veljko Radeka, BNL RICH 2004 Workshop • Developments in electronics: CMOS scaling • The quest for single electron sensitivity: avalanche gain vs electronic noise and detector capacitance • A neglected technology: Interconnections • Matching electronics and detector technology 1 Acknowledgements: • • • • • • Gianluigi De Geronimo Paul O’Connor Sergio Rescia Pavel Rehak Craig Woody Bo Yu … my BNL colleagues. 2 Electronics for RICH Detectors • Developments in electronics: CMOS scaling • The quest for single electron sensitivity: avalanche gain vs electronic noise and detector capacitance • A neglected technology: Interconnections • Matching electronics and detector technology 3 CMOS Technology Roadmap Year 199 1 1993 1995 Min. feature size [nm] 800 500 350 250 180 130 90 60 Oxide thickness [nm] 16 11 7.7 5.5 4 2.7 2.2 1.8 Power supply [V] 5 5/3.3 3.3 2.5 1.8 1.5 1.2 0.9 Threshold voltage [V] 0.7 0.65 0.6 0.5 0.38 0.28 0.22 0.17 Cutoff frequency [GHz] 12 19 28 40 65 75 100 165 • • 1997 1999 Driven by digital VLSI circuit needs Goals: in each generation – 2X increase in density – 1.5X increase in speed 2001 2004 2008 4 CMOS scaling: Oxide Thickness: 10 100 Volts kT/q tox /d Si Supply voltage 5 Threshold voltage 0 0.25 0.18 0.15 0.13 Lmin, m 0.1 0.07 10 0.25 0.18 0.15 0.13 Lmin, m 0.1 5 0.07 Threshold mismatch due to discrete dopant distribution 3D p-MOSFET simulation with stochastically placed dopants D.J. Frank, IBM J. Res. Dev. 46, 235-244, Mar./May 2002 DVT Dopant atoms per MOSFET 1000 500 0 0.25 0.18 0.15 0.13 Lmin, m 0.1 0.07 6 But: Gate tunneling current !!! • Gate current expected to increase 100 – 200 x per generation below 0.18 mm • Jox ~ 100 A/cm2 projected for Lmin = 0.1 mm generation with nitrided SiO2 • Considered tolerable for digital circuits (total gate area per chip ~ 0.1 cm2) • Typical CSA input FET would have IG ~ 1 - 10 µA; ENCp ~ 2000 - 7000 rms e- at 1 µsec • Good for radiation resistance – bad for ENC. SiO2 gate leakage current (Lo et al., Electron Dev. Letters 1997) 7 FPGAs - Thirteen Years of Progress 200x More Logic plus memory, µP, DSP, MGT 40x Faster 50x Lower Power per function x MHz 500x Lower Cost per function P. Alfke 8 LHC Boston Sept 04 PA Higher Leakage Current… High Leakage current = static power consumption Was <100 microamps, now > 100 mA, even amps (!) Caused by: Gate leakage due to 16 Å gate thickness Sub-threshold leakage current incomplete turn-off because threshold does not scale Tyranny of numbers: 10 nA x 100 million transistors = 1 A evenly distributed, thus no reliability problem Sub-100 nm is not ideal for portable designs P. Alfke 9 LHC Boston Sept 04 PA VLSI ASIC Costs …. Mask set >$1M + design + verification + risk Source:IBM P. Alfke 10 LHC Boston Sept 04 PA Custom monolithics: technology access Multiproject foundry services • Combine designs from many institutions on one maskset • Arrange for regular runs with a variety of popular foundries • Design support • Models • Design rules – Process monitoring • Amortize cost of run over many users multiproject wafer 11 Front-End Electronics – Preamplifier Power Energy Resolution [ENC] 400 TECHNOLOGY SUPPLY COST/RUN 0.35µm 3.3V 14k$ 0.25µm 2.5V 19k$ 0.18µm 1.8V 32k$ 300 200 100 0.01 0.1 1 Preamplifier Power [mW] 32-channel ASIC - layout is pad-limited 3 x 3 mm² power / channel 1mW (preamplifier < 200µW) energy resolution < 250 rms electrons (600ns peaking time, 5pF) 12 Electronics for RICH Detectors • Developments in electronics: CMOS scaling • The quest for single electron sensitivity: avalanche gain vs electronic noise and detector capacitance • A neglected technology: Interconnections • Matching electronics and detector technology 13 14 Single Electron Detection and Timing vs Avalanche Gain Gav Detection (Yes/No): Gav ≥ ~ 10 ENC/qe “Common” Timing: Gav ≥ (ENC/qe) (tp/σt) ; tp = peaking time after shaping > signal current width Optimum timing: ---------------------------------------1. Coarse timing: ~ 1 – 2 ns , for tp = 20ns → Gav ≥ 10 ENC/qe = 100 ns → ≥ 50 ENC/qe 2. Precision timing: ~ 100 – 200 ps , for tp = 20 ns → Gav ≥ 100 ENC/qe ENC = ? (Note: Optimum filter for timing is different from opt. filter for charge measurement) 15 Optimum ENC vs Input Capacitance TSMC 0.25µm P-MOS, Tp=20ns ENCopt [r.m.s. electrons] 1000 Pd=100µW Pd=1mW 100 Pd=10µW 10 10 -14 10 fF 10 -13 10 -12 Input capacitance Cin [F] 10 -11 10 pF Power Pd is in input leg only. Add minimum 30µW for signal processing 16 Optimum ENC vs Input Capacitance 1000 ENCopt [r.m.s. electrons] TSMC 0.25µm P-MOS, Tp=200ns Pd=100µW 100 Pd=1mW Pd=10µW 10 1 -14 10 10 fF 10 -13 10 -12 Input capacitance Cin [F] 10 -11 10 pF Power Pd is in input leg only. Add minimum 30µW for signal processing 17 “Why is the detector capacitance so important in determining the noise performance?” It is illustrative to express the noise performance in terms of signal and noise “energy” on the detector capacitance. From matched filter theory and the well known relations for ENC: for white series noise for 1/f series noise =transistor carrier transit time ≈ Cgs/gm ; tm= integration time ; Kf is the 1/f noise constant [Joules]; kB= Boltzmann constant. Numerical (dimensionless) constants aw , a1/f , contain capacitance matching constraints (Cd/Cgs ratio), weighting function shape parameters, but are independent of the transistor width. Amplifier noise energy referred to the detector capacitance is independent of the detector capacitance. The signal energy is inversely proportional to the detector capacitance. (Cd here includes stray capacitances.) For a “gut feeling”: Charge at higher potential energy is easier to detect – 1 electron on 1 atofarad (quantum dot) is readily detectable – while not so at higher capacitances. 18 VR 06/17/04 Pixel density – detector trends 1E+6 1E+7 LSST 1E+6 1E+5 barcode 1E+5 DEPFET1 M'pix2 DEPFET2 1E+4 XAMPS1 1E+3 LHC pixels 1E+3 1E+2 1E+2 EXAFS PHX MVD PET 1E+1 gamma cam 1E+1 STAR TPC 1E+0 Doubling every 5 months 1E+0 PHX PAD 1E-1 AP S M PE T 2006 LS ST XA M PS 1 ba rc od e LH C pi xe ls DE PF ET 2 a m m EX AF S m 2002 Year 2004 ca 'pi x2 ga DE PF ET 1 2000 M PA D PH X PH X TP C 1998 M VD 1E-1 1E-2 ST AR pixels/cm2 1E+4 MAPS 2008 2010 19 Power density • On-detector power density is limited by cooling capability. • Electronics for highdensity detector must be extremely low power. 20 Silicon sensor (for EXAFS spectroscopy) sample sensor • 384 pixels • 1 x 1 x 0.25 mm Si pad detector • rate > 10 MHz/cm2 • 8.2 mW/chan • FWHM < 300eV, noise < 28 e• preamps + digital integrated on-chip G. De Geronimo et al., Proc. PIXEL2002 International Workshop, Carmel, CA, 2002 21 Optimized noise vs. power (MOSFET optimized at each power level and shaping time) Shaping time: Noise (rms e-) 1000 10 ns 30 100 300 1000 3000 100 Note: dN 0 .4 dP d ln N 0.4 d ln P 10 10 100 1000 10000 Power (W) Cd = 1pF 0.25 µm CMOS 22 G. DE Geronimo, P. O`Connor Electronics for RICH Detectors • Developments in electronics: CMOS scaling • The quest for single electron sensitivity: avalanche gain vs electronic noise and detector capacitance • A neglected technology: Interconnections • Matching electronics and detector technology 23 Detector – FE interconnect choices • board-to-backplane – – – – easy to test, repair large boards possible connector pins are failure points coarse pitch and high capacitance (> 1pF) • standard SMT package soldered to board (QFP or BGA) – – – easy to test, difficult to repair capacitance down to 0.2 pF for small packages board area limited by reflow oven capacity • wirebonded chip-on-board – – – – difficult to test, assemble, and repair board area limited by wirebonder fragile low capacitance (0.1 pF) • bump-bonded flip-chip – – – can match pixels with pitch from ~30 – 1000 m difficult to test, assemble, and repair circuitry has to fit in same area as pixel • monolithic detector/electronics – – interconnect is created as part of the detector fabrication process ultra-low capacitance (few fF) 24 Interpolating Pad Readout for GEM (Gas Electron Multiplier) <100µm rms position resolution with 2mm pad pitch Window Upper GEM Lower GEM Anode Pad Plane 25 Time Projection Chamber (TPC) – (for Laser Electron Gamma Source) TPC Can double-GEM planes HV mesh plane and UV window for laser calibration anode pad plane electronics per pad ~ 8000 channels Spin ASYmmetry Array (SASY) 26 Board layout for a TPC – GEM anode plane. 32 channels per ASIC. ~ 8000 channels → ~ 10 watts on 35 cm dia plane 27 Board layout for a TPC – GEM anode plane. ASICS Blind vias GEM foils 28 ASIC Layout buffer channel TSMC 0.25µm 32 channels 3.1 x 3.6 mm² (~0.35 mm2/channel) 47k MOSFETs 43mW QFN package (56) bias logic 29 ASIC Readout Channel - Block Diagram neighbors flag continuous reset threshold 2nd order shaper CONTINUOUS RESET • feedback MOSFET • self adaptive • low noise • fully compensated • US patent 5,793,254 • NIM A421, p.322 • TNS 47, p.1458 350 µW mux1 PD timing detector mux2 TD baseline stabilizer ramp INPUT n-MOSFET • optimized for operating region • ENC<250 rms electrons • NIM A480, p.713 peak detector SHAPER • amplifier with passive feedback • dual stage multiple feedback • 2nd order, 600ns peaking time • adjustable channel gain (3-bit) BASELINE STABILIZER (BLH) • band-gap referenced • low-frequency feedback • slew-rate limited follower • high dc stability < 1mV • low channel dispersion < 4mV • TNS 47, p.818 PEAK DETECTOR • two-phase configuration • offset error cancellation • high absolute accuracy < 0.2% • US patent 6,512,399 • NIM A484, p.544 TIMING DETECTOR • time-to-amplitude converter • internal or external ramp • two-phase configuration • timing resolution < 20ns rms 900 µW 30 31 Electronics for RICH Detectors • Developments in electronics: CMOS scaling • The quest for single electron sensitivity: avalanche gain vs electronic noise and detector capacitance • A neglected technology: Interconnections • Matching electronics and detector technology 32 GEM Readout of the HBD • Triple GEM - can be made insensitive to charged particles - minimizes photon feedback and ion backflow • Modest gain (~ 5 x 103) • CsI photocathode deposited on top surface of uppermost GEM foil Prototype HBD detector • CF4 used as working gas and Cherenkov radiator - can achieve high gain and good transmission down into deep VUV ( large N0) 33 Readout Board and Preamps Preamp signals to shaper + ADC Hybrid Preamps with line drivers • Being developed by BNL Instrumentation ~ ¾” honeycomb • Based on IO-535 wires Read pads ~ 3x3 cm2 •± input signal •± 2.5 V output GEMs • Need almost one full rack for the readout electronics 34 The HBD Detector HBD Gas Volume: Filled with CF4 Radiator (nCF4=1.000620, LRADIATOR = 50 cm) Proximity focused Cherenkov forms “blobs” on an image plane (Qmax = cos-1(1/n)~36 mrad rBLOB~3.6cm) Coarse granularity readout (~ 2x2 cm2) Windowless Cherenkov Detector Radiator gas = Working Gas e+ e- q Pair Opening Angle Triple GEM detectors Dilepton pair (8 panels per side) Electron pairs produce Cherenkov light, but hadrons with P < 4 GeV/c do not 55 cm 5 cm Beam Pipe Space allocated for services 35 Low-Noise preamplifier – thick film ceramic hybrid • single channel • 29 components • 44 solder joints • 8 connections to PCB • 20 x 14 x 2.5 mm 36 Highly segmented detectors N=1 N=9 N=25 Benefits: • Position Resolution – pixel pitch ~ 1/N • Energy resolution (ENC) – CDET ~ 1/N – IDARK ~ 1/N – pulse shaping time ~ N • Rate capability – pileup ~ 1/N • “Small pixel” effect – improve energy resolution in semiconductor detectors with poor hole transport N=49 Drawbacks: • Interconnect density → bump bonding; BGAs ~N • Electronics channel count ~ N But these are not “old channels”! • Power/channel ~1/N Noise is reduced more due to lower C, than increased due to lower power. 37 38 Concluding remarks: • Microelectronics technology allows us to take advantage of fine electrode segmentation • This leads to lower noise and lower avalanche gain • Tough luck to very large electrode pads – not well matched to microelectronics • Detector, detector electrodes, interconnections and the ASIC are all constituents of an interactive design. • Scaling of digital electronics (powerful FPGAs) allows real time processing close to or on detector 39 ASIC Designer vs the Rest of the Collaboration 40