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First Results with the QIE8 ASIC

First Results with the QIE8 ASIC. A. Baumbaugh, J. E. Elias, J. Hoff, S. Los, C. Nelson, T. Shaw, J. Whitmore, R. J. Yarema, T. Zimmerman Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory P.O. Box 500, Batavia, Illinois 60510 Presented by S. Los March 27, 2002. Outline. Introduction to HCAL Readout

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First Results with the QIE8 ASIC

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  1. First Results with the QIE8 ASIC • A. Baumbaugh, J. E. Elias, J. Hoff, S. Los, C. Nelson, T. Shaw, J. Whitmore, R. J. Yarema, T. Zimmerman • Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory • P.O. Box 500, Batavia, Illinois 60510 • Presented by S. Los • March 27, 2002

  2. Outline • Introduction to HCAL Readout • QIE requirements/operation • QIE8 functional blocks • Test-bench measurements • Conclusions

  3. CMS HCAL Signal Collection • QIE is a charge sensitive digitizer located in a readout box on or close to the detector.

  4. QIE Requirements • In this table are the very basic requirements for the HCAL digitizer. For comparison there is a column with its predecessor data. • The most challenging improvements needed are the Noise, Sensitivity, and Analog BW (non-inverting input for HF PMT).

  5. QIE Block Diagram • Two Amplifier sets for signals from PMTs/HF and HPDs/HB+HE • Four Integrator sets to cover Compare/MuxOut/Reset phases when the first set is not integrating

  6. Non-Inverting Amp/Splitter • There are two major requirements to process PMT signals: • High bandwidth to integrate the whole signal in a 25 ns slice, and avoid signal pile-up from other beam crossings. • Stable input impedance to use transmission cables, and remove the electronics from high radiation zone. ±1% up to 1 mA

  7. Inverting Amp/Splitter • HPD has a much smaller gain than a PMT, thus we needed following: • Higher sensitivity and lower noise. • 40 MHz BW to collect the signal in few time slices and provide it with a time stamp .

  8. QIE8 FADC Ladder Design • There are two structural changes that made it possible to meet our requirements of dynamic range, sensitivity, and precision while allowing to decrease the number of integration ranges from 8 to 4. • Non-linear Ladder design • Two comparator sets for Regular/Calibration mode operation • Regular mode is piece linear with steps 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 wide. • Calibration mode is linear and uses additional taps 1/3 on the same ladder.

  9. QIE8 Response Function • Due to proper biasing every conversion range covers a dynamic range of about 5:1 thus preserving precision in the beginning of the scale.

  10. FADC Quantization Error • Implementation of a 4-range splitter and a 5 bit non-linear FADC allows to simplify the design while having minimum effect on the detector resolution.

  11. FADC Linearity • La

  12. FADC Linearity

  13. Timing of the Signal

  14. Timing of the Signal

  15. Calibration Mode DNL

  16. 2 Channel QIE Board

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