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Rad-Hard qualification for the LHCb RICH L0 electronics

Rad-Hard qualification for the LHCb RICH L0 electronics. M. Adinolfi University of Oxford. The problem. There are 3 main type of radiation effects to take into account: Total Ionising Dose we expect of the order of 2 krad per year (includes a safety factor of 2 in the simulation)

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Rad-Hard qualification for the LHCb RICH L0 electronics

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  1. Rad-Hard qualification for the LHCb RICH L0 electronics M. Adinolfi University of Oxford M. Adinolfi – University of Oxford – MAPMT Workshop – Imperial College 27 June 2003

  2. The problem • There are 3 main type of radiation effects to take into account: • Total Ionising Dose we expect of the order of 2 krad per year (includes a safety factor of 2 in the simulation) • Displacement damage - atoms in the lattice are displaced by collisions with hadrons.Bipolar and optical devices are particularly sensible to this. • Single Event Effects i.e. effects which are not cumulative M. Adinolfi – University of Oxford – MAPMT Workshop – Imperial College 27 June 2003

  3. Single Event Upsets • The circuit is designed so that it has two stable states, one that represents a stored '0' and one that represents a stored '1.' In each state, two transistors are turned on and two are turned off. A bit-flip occurs when an energetic particle causes the state of the transistors in the circuit to reverse. This phenomenon occurs in many microcircuits, including memory chips and microprocessors. • The particle produces charges along its path, in the form of electrons and holes. These are collected at the source and drain, and a current pulse appears. This can be large enough to produce an effect like that of a normal signal applied to the transistor. M. Adinolfi – University of Oxford – MAPMT Workshop – Imperial College 27 June 2003

  4. Single Event Latchup • Circuits are manually made in silicon by combining adjacent p-type and n-type regions into transistors. • Paths other than those chosen to form the desired transistor can sometimes result in so-called parasitic transistors, which, under normal conditions, cannot be activated. • Latchup occurs when a spurious current spike, such as that produced by a heavy cosmic ray, activates one of a pair of these parasitic transistors, which combine into a circuit with large positive feedback. • The result is that the circuit turns fully on and causes a short across the device until the latter burns up or the power to it is cycled. M. Adinolfi – University of Oxford – MAPMT Workshop – Imperial College 27 June 2003

  5. What do we know of the components? • Some results are available on the web (e.g. see http://klabs.org) but: • Although the published test have been made by employees of the producer they are not official results shown in components specs. • These are presentations on web, they are not articles published on refereed magazines. • They can be used as guideline but need verification. SEU cross section for AX series SRAM M. Adinolfi – University of Oxford – MAPMT Workshop – Imperial College 27 June 2003

  6. How does this affect the L0 FE • Electronic components in the L0 board which may be sensitive to radiation effects include: • Flash ADC. • VICSEL. • The beetle packaging if not in ceramics. • FPGA. In particular FPGA can have SEU in different parts of its circuitry including the Program, the RAM, the Registers. In general the cross-section will be different in the different parts. All of them need to be verified. • The effects of SEU in the program can be minimized by using anti-fuse technology e.g. the ACTEL AX family. • Anti-fuse devices are vulnerable to another effect: Single Event Dielectric Rupture in which an anti-fuse connection in the chip is broken. • In general producers do not quote SEU rates. Chips which are qualified can be purchased but the cost is of the order of $1000 per chip! • LHCb qualification program appears to be the only way. M. Adinolfi – University of Oxford – MAPMT Workshop – Imperial College 27 June 2003

  7. The tests of an FPGA: example • See ESA_QCA0109TS_C project. • 14 pipelined shift registers each 144 bit long is implemented together with self-test circuitry. • Data is compared with itself and any mismatch is reported. • Data is generated by a feed back flip-flop register and an external clock. M. Adinolfi – University of Oxford – MAPMT Workshop – Imperial College 27 June 2003

  8. The tests of an FPGA: example (2) • Triple redundancy logic can be used to minimize the effect of SEU. • SEU rates needs measuring in this case too. M. Adinolfi – University of Oxford – MAPMT Workshop – Imperial College 27 June 2003

  9. Testing or reinventing the wheel • Several labs in LHCb are interested in radiation verification. Tests for components such as the ADC and the VICSEL can probably be shared. • Only other detector interested in the ACTEL is the calorimeter. The dose in the ECAL electronics is ~10 time less than in RICH-1. ECAL has not scheduled any test. • In principle it’d be ideal to test components on a board as close as possible to the final version. This would allow test the FPGA algorithms and would avoid working on different DAQ, monitoring etc systems. • Radiation qualification tests need to be done as soon as possible. • Only viable solution seems to be to develop a simple board hosting the components to be tested, with a simple DAQ connected. M. Adinolfi – University of Oxford – MAPMT Workshop – Imperial College 27 June 2003

  10. What do we need? • In order to test the FPGA within a few months we need: • A custom made board to host the FPGA and eventually the other components. • A DAQ system: the L1 board with minimal configuration and a laptop can be used. This is possibly no longer true if the ADC and the VICSEL are also being tested. • Special monitoring facilities for example for the current - possibly this needs to be done also in the experiment. • If the PINT algorithm is to be used to test it a TTC system is also needed. This is not required if we’re happy with a test based on a shift register. • The whole system is to be fully functional, easily transportable, plug-and-play, fast to use. Beam or nuclear sources cost money! • Ideally more than 1 FPGA ( 2) should be tested. • Somebody to do it! M. Adinolfi – University of Oxford – MAPMT Workshop – Imperial College 27 June 2003

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