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RPC HV & LV systems

This article discusses the introduction and description of the HV and LV systems for RPC detectors in CMS, including the system requirements and different design options. It also presents the prototypes tests and solutions for cables and connectors, as well as the conclusions drawn from the study.

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RPC HV & LV systems

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  1. RPC HV&LV systems I.N.F.N. Naples Introduction Detector description Requirements SASY 2000 prototypes tests More systems description Cables and connectors Solutions and costs Conclusions A. Boiano1, F. Loddo2, P. Paolucci1, D. Piccolo1, A. Ranieri2 1) I.N.F.N. of Naples, 2) I.N.F.N. of Bari Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  2. Introduction I I.N.F.N. Naples The CMS sub-detectors will be equipped with a large part of the HV and LV systems placed around the detector; in a not “easily accessible” area. The CMS and ATLAS RPC groups are investigating the possibility to have both the systems around the detector, working in a very hard conditions for the high magnetic field and high radiation environment. The LHC RPC groups, in collaboration with the CAEN, have designed and tested an HV-LV prototype (SASY 2000) able to work in an hostile area. The system is based on the idea to split in two the HV and LV systems: • LOCAL:Central system (mainframes) placed in control room; • REMOTE:distribution system placed around/on the detector, consisting of a crate housing the HV and LV boards. A natural evolution of the SASY2000 has been presented to CMS (May 03) by the CAEN company: EASY system. Different solutions are under study by the CMS RPC group Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  3. RB2/3 RB3 and RB4 Bigap Bigap Bigap Bigap Bigap Bigap Bigap Bigap ALV2 DLV2 ALV1 DLV1 Bigap HV1 HV2 HV1 HV2 ALV1 DLV1 ALV2 DLV2 HV1 HV2 Detector description I I.N.F.N. Naples There are 3 different kind of chambers with 2 or 3 bigaps and equipped with 6 or 12 or 18 Front-End Boards RB1 and RB2/2 ALV1 DLV1 ALV2 DLV2 HV1 HV2 Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  4. Detector description II I.N.F.N. Naples RB1/RB2in RPC chamber Front-End Bigap Distrib. board Bigap ALV1 DLV1 ALV2 DLV2 ALV Analog Voltage = 7V Absorb. (6FEBs)= 0.42 A DLV DigitalVoltage = 7V Absorb. (6FEBs)= 0.9 A I2C input LV+I2C FEB out LV in Distributes analog and digital LV It supplies LV power to 3 FEB chains It supplies the I2C main line from LB and one backup line from DT. Total power/(ALV+DLV) ch.:1.32 A * 7 V = 9.24 W Expected Power 120 W/sector 7.2 kW/Barrel Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  5. 3 4 1 2 3 4 2 5 Muon racks 1 6 12 7 11 8 10 9 5 6 7 8 Barrel wheel overview I.N.F.N. Naples 5 CMS wheels 12 sectors balcony 12 sectors * 5 wheels = 60 sectors Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  6. 6+6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps 6+6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps 6+6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps LVA channel LVD channel HV channel HV-LV schema for a Barrel sector I.N.F.N. Naples 78 FEBs = 13 ALV+13DLV ch. 17 bi-gaps = 34 HV ch. DT chamber 6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps 6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps 2+2 LV RB4 4+4 HV DT chamber 4+4 HV 6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps 6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps RB3 2+2 LV 6+6+6 FEBs / 3 bi-gaps 6 LV 6 HV DT chamber RB2 4 LV 4 HV 4 LV 4 HV DT chamber RB1 4 LV 4 HV 2 bi-gaps = 96 strips = 6 FEBs Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  7. System requirements I I.N.F.N. Naples General requirements: • working in high magnetic field(up to 2 Tesla); • working in an high radiation environment(5*1010 p/cm2& 5*1011 n/cm2 & 12-15 kRad); • local system in control room + distributed remote systems on the detector (at least for the LV); • redundancy of the control electronic devices (mP per board) • input voltage from the CMS AC/DC 48V power supply; • looking forward common CMS solutions in order to simplify the hardware and software development/maintenance of the systems Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  8. System requirements II I.N.F.N. Naples HV requirements: • 12KV/1mA • Ripple < 100 mV pp at load per f < 20 MHz • Programmable voltage 0-12KV • Voltage step 10V • Voltage precision < 10V • V/I/Trip/Status control and monitoring • Error/Power leds LV requirements: • 7V/3A • Ripple < 10 mV pp at load per f < 20 MHz • Programmable voltage 0-8V • Voltage step 100 mV • Voltage precision 100 mV • V/I/Trip/Status control and monitoring • Individual ON/OFF • Error/Power leds Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  9. System requirementsIII I.N.F.N. Naples Control and monitoring system requirements: • Common hardware and software (PVSS II)solution; • Detailed control/monitoring of the remote channels: • voltage/current and temperature • protections, errors and hard-reset for communication lost. • A second independent way to control them (telnet/ssh......) Design requirements: • Possibility to easily increase the HV granularity; • Possibility to easily fix RPC problems: • disconnect high-current/sparking gap/bi-gaps; • modify the HV map in order to group bi-gaps with same working point; • Possibility to measure the RPC working-point in standalone. Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  10. HV-LV system design I.N.F.N. Naples Different HV and LV designs will be described in order to reduce the total cost preserving the system requirements, already analyzed and the trigger functionality: • 1 HV/bigap 2 LV/6FEBs;FULL OPTION • 1 HV/chamber 2 LV/chamber;CHAMBER OPTION • 1 HV/station 2 LV/station;STATION OPTION Then we will analyze two different solutions for both the HV and LV system based on the idea to have them on the detector or in control room. • HV in control room HV on the detector • LV in control room LV on the detector Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  11. 6+6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps 6+6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps 6+6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps HV-LV schema for FULL option I.N.F.N. Naples 26 LV channels 17 HV channels Chambers have been designed with 2 gaps, of adjacent bi-gaps, connected to the same HV channel, in order to reduce the number of HV channels preserving the number of station available for the muon trigger 6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps 6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps 2+2 LV 2+2 HV 2+2 HV 6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps 6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps 2+2 LV 6+6+6 FEBs / 3 bi-gaps 6 LV 3 HV 4 LV 2 HV 4 LV 2 HV 4 LV 2 HV FULL option 1 HV channel per 2-gaps 2 LV channels per 6-FEBs Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  12. HV-LV schema for CHAMBER option I.N.F.N. Naples 16 LV channels8 HV channels 6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps 6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps 2+2 LV 1+1 HV 1+1 HV 6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps 6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps 2+2 LV 6+6+6 FEBs / 3 bi-gaps 2 LV 1 HV Reduction of 2 LV 1 HV 6+6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps HV 1020  480 ch LV 1560  960 ch 2 LV 6+6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps 1 HV 2 LV 6+6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps 1 HV CHAMBER option 1 HV channel per chamber 2 LV channels per chamber Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  13. HV-LV schema for STATION option I.N.F.N. Naples 12 LV channels6 HV channels 6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps 6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps 2 LV 1 HV 1 HV 6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps 6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps 2 LV 6+6+6 FEBs / 3 bi-gaps 2 LV 1 HV reduction 2 LV 1 HV 6+6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps HV 1020  432 ch LV 1560  720 ch 2 LV 6+6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps 1 HV 2 LV 6+6 FEBs / 2 bi-gaps 1 HV STATION option 1 HV channel per station 2 LV channels per station Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  14. More numbers about HV and LV I.N.F.N. Naples Looking at different solutions seems to be reasonable to have the following crate/board design: • HV board with 6 ch.(12 KV / 1 mA) 3 slots width; • LV board with 12 ch.(7 V / 3.2 A) 3 slots width; • 6U standard Eurocard crate housing up to 6 HV/LV boards. What do we have in the Station (final !) option ?: 1 HV board/sector  60 HV boards 1 LV board/sector  60 LV boards The number of crates depends on where they will be dislocated and so are different in the Detector/Control Room solutions Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  15. SASY 2000 prototype I.N.F.N. Naples SASY 2000 prototype The HV-LV prototype 0 consists of:1 HV board (SA2001), 3 LV boards (SA2002) and 1 controller. It has been split in three pieces, following a “logical separation” of the system, in order to study the functionality of every single piece and component. • The following tests has been performed on both the prototypes and will be repeated for the final boards: • Magnetic field test up to 7 KGauss (at CERN) (results shown by CAEN at CERN in May 2002) • Radiation testup to 10 LHC eq-years (at Louvain La Neuve) (results shown) • Test on the RPC to study the noise condition (to be performed at the test station in Bari); • High Stress Testto study the system under very hard conditions (under test in Napoli). Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  16. Neutron radiation test I.N.F.N. Naples The SASY2000 HV-LV prototype has been tested twice (May-Aug 2002) at the Louvain La Neuve radiation facility. The total neutron fluence requests for 10 LHC years is about 1x1012n/cm2 (note: in RE1/1 region) corresponding to 2 hours and 40 minwith a beam at 1 mA at 70 cm SASY2000 • In first session the system worked well for 30 min. corresponding to 1.8 • 1011n/cm2 (a factor 6 higher than that expected on RB4!) We lost the communication with the prototype. CAEN reported a known loss of current gain due to irradiation on CNY17 opto-insulator used to enable the HV/LV channels. The prototype was irradiated for 80 min corresponding to 4.8*1011 n/cm2. • On the second prototype (ATLAS one) the gain current loss was cured using a lower value biasing resistor. Was registered a few SE on the controller with loss of communication but the normal condition was restored after 1 s on power OFF/ON condition (it will be implemented by firmware an HOT RESETto recover the communication without interruption of remote power supply). • After the irradiation the SASY2000 was tested outside, preserving its original functionality. (robustness of hardware) Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  17. Magnetic field test setup Magnet: MNP24-1 at CERN Bldg. 168 B: up to 10 KGauss B around CMS: .44T Test condition: 0-7 KGauss • Magnetic Field: • up to 5 KGauss • Test condition • SA2001: VOUT = 8kV, Rload=12 M • SA2002: VOUT0 = 4.7 V, VOUT1 = 5.0 V, IOUT0,1 = 1.9A • from 0 a 5 KGauss: loss of efficiency 2% (// B) 0% ( B) (efficiency defined as =Pload/PDC-DC converter) (75%  73%) • Future improvements: • transformer oriented according  B  it will work reliably up to 8 KGauss Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  18. High Stress Test in Naples I I.N.F.N. Naples • The High Stress Test system has been designed and developed by the group of Naples in order to make a complete test of any HV-LV power supply. • It consists of a test-box controlled by a PC running LabVIEW 6.1 • At present the HST system is able to make: • Long term test:A cycle of measurements (voltage and current) made using different resistive charge (from 1M to 10 G) to explore the whole range of the PS. • Spark test:A cycle of spark at different voltages are generated in order to test the hardware/software behavior of the PS under this critical conditions. • Calibration:independent measurement of the voltage and current (PS and test-box). The Trip-time, the rump-up and rump-down are also calibrated. Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  19. High Stress Test description I I.N.F.N. Naples The test-box consists of a custom rotating switch controlled by a step-to-step motor through a microcontroller (Microchip) . Each position of the switch corresponds to an electrical contact placed on a PCB and positioned on a circle at a distance of 22,5o each others. The motor needs 400 steps to make a complete turn corresponding to about 0.9o/step. Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  20. High Stress Test description II I.N.F.N. Naples The micro-controller PIC 16F876-04 is used to: • controls the motor through a custom board housing a “power driver” used to generate the phases needs to control the motor. • drive the LCD monitor placed on the box and the manual control. • drive the communication through a serial port RS232 used to connect it to a PC. • control an internal ADC (10 bits) and drive a Programmable Gain Amplifier. It is used to measure the current provided by the PS at different full scale (1mA, 100 mA, 1mA). Each position of the commutator is connected to: • a different resistive charge (10G, 5G, 1G, 100M, 9M, 6); • one of the four spark systems (10KV, 5KV, 2KV, short); • The spark system consists of two electrodes connected between the high voltage and the ground, placed at a fixed distance in order to generate sparks at a predetermined voltage. Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  21. Ripple measurements I.N.F.N. Naples • We are studying the noise and ripple of the HV and LV boards using a scope connected to a PC equipped with LabVIEW. • After a month we have not seen any unusual noise/events on both the boards. • The ripple peek to peek at load (f < 1 MHz) of the 2 HV channels is < 20 mV while for the 6 LV channels it is about 200 mv ??? The problem is present also when LV is OFF but mainframe is ON (could be a bad ground connection ?) is under study. Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  22. CMS common LV solution proposal I.N.F.N. Naples In the 2002 the CMS collaboration decided to evaluated the possibility to have a common solution for the LV (and HV) system in order to minimize: costs, installation, software, spare, expertise and maintenance. The idea has been enthusiastically accepted by the sub-detector unless HCAL. CMS has contacted a lot of electronic companies asking them to propose a common LV solution for all the subsystems giving them some general requirement and all the requirement got from each sub-detector. In the last CMS Electronic week (May 2003) companies have been invited to present a LV system for all the CMS subsystem. Two companies; CAEN and WIENER presented two projects for LV (and HV) The CAEN project, called EASY, is a natural evolution of the SASY 2000 Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  23. OPC SERVER EASY EASY 3000 EASY Radiation & Magnetic Field EASY RackMount DCS + Standalone EASY EASY EASY EASY 4000 CAN Bus based link Ad-hoc protocol Speed and reliability No interoperability issues Can work in hostile area CAEN EASY project I I.N.F.N. Naples It seems to respect the hardware and software requirements made by CMS but we need a prototype to say YES Full integration in SY1527/SY2527 • 21 slots per crate • 3 kW Maximum Output Power • Magnetic field capability: 2 kGauss • Expected rad.tol.: 5*1010 p/cm2 , 2*1011 n/cm2,15 kRad Per channel: • Independent ON/OFF • Vmon (Connector and Load), Imon • Vset (Software or Hardware) • Programmable Trip, Sense wires • Status Signals • Imax per module (Hardware)

  24. CAEN EASY project II I.N.F.N. Naples boards ready to be produced (on catalog)

  25. Other LV companies I.N.F.N. Naples • RPC LV system: • the Wiener proposed a set of Power Supply (power, dimension) of very high quality with also some software developed. Magnetic and radiation requirement under discussion ! • we did not found any other Power Supply company interested in produce a PS with our requirements (B & rad) • we contacted 3 companies for standard LV power supply (control room): • the monitor/control hardware system to be developed; • software and DCS integration to be developed; • crate (cooling) to house them to be developed; • prices are similar with sensing; Have the LV in control room means: long cables (cooling), patch panels, hardware/software to develop @ similar price Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  26. HV cable and connectors I.N.F.N. Naples The HV cable and connectors have been chosen and approved by CERN • 2 high voltage pins to supply –12 kV • 1 pin for signal return • insulating material • Polietilene HDPE (Eraclene Polimeri Europa (57%) • Masterbatch (GPO1246 Viba) (43%) • Metal cover connected to external chamber aluminum frame • ZAMA (UNI 3717 G-Zn A14 Cu1) Suitable to sustain up to 15 kV Cable characteristics: • According CERN safety instruction IS 23 • Single conductor- = 0.16 mm • Conductor resistance @ 20°C = 147 /Km • Core- = 3 mm • Screen wire-=0.2 mm (for 10 conductors) • Overall diameter = 8.4 mm (for 3 conductors) • Price: 1.050 €/Km (for 10 Km) Price: 24 Euro/couple pieces Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  27. LV connector and cable I.N.F.N. Naples The LV cable and connectors are under discussion LV cable:8 wires  outer diam. = 7.5 mm Price 1,00 Euro/m 12 wires  outer diam. = 8.5 mm Price 1,50 Euro/m LV cable connector: female 12 pins Molex Microfit-Fit 3,0 (43025-1200) Price 3,49 Euro/5 female pins 20 AWG Molex Microfit-Fit 3,0 (43030-0007) Price 10,37 Euro/100 LV RPC connector: male 12 pins Molex Microfit-Fit 3,0 (43020-1200) Price Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  28. LV and HV CAD cable design I.N.F.N. Naples Max LV/HV local cable lenght = 15 mt Min LV/HV local cable lenght = 6 mt Average lenght = 12 mt Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  29. Detector and Control Room option I.N.F.N. Naples Looking at our requirements seems to be clear that is much better to have the HV system in control room and the LV on the detector but we have analyzed both the solutions in order to have a complete picture of the systems. What doDetector and Control Room mean ? • Detector: the HV/LV crates are in the racks placed on the balconies (4 per wheel) • Control room: the crate are in the USC zone(150 ?? mt far from the detector). Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  30. HV patch panel HV patch panel HV crate LV crate HV patch panel HV crate LV crate detector/control room option I.N.F.N. Naples Control Room HV patch panel = 6 U LV crate = 6+1 U Total = 13 U 1cable/balcony  60 cables 3 4 3 4 2 5 control room option 1 6 detector option 12 7 11 8 10 9 5 6 HV patch panel = 6 U LV crate = 6+1 U HV crate = 6+1 U Total = 20 U Detector Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  31. HV on the detector I.N.F.N. Naples 60-80 HV boards placed in 20 crates (1 per balcony) No easy access, no way to disconnect a bigap, difficult upgrade Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  32. HV in Control Room I.N.F.N. Naples Power consumption: board =72 W crate =430 W Total4.3KW 60 HV boards placed in 10 crates 60 long cables (130 mt), double patch panels Easy operation on HV (bigap, chamber....)

  33. LV on the detector I.N.F.N. Naples 60LV boards placed in 20 crates (1 per balcony) Power consumption: board (12 ch.)  116 W crate (3 boards.)  350 W wheel (4 crates)  1.4 KW Total  7.0KW Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  34. HV control room HV on detector HV and LV cost estimation I.N.F.N. Naples The total costs of the systems are calculated using a spreadsheet having as inputs the following items: • number of:connectors, cables, patch panels, boards, crates, controllers and mainframes • cable lengthandinstallation costs • cost of each of those items We have used the following prices (Euro): 3500 HV board, 2500 LV boards, 1500 crates, 3500 branch contr, 10K mainframe. Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  35. HV and LV cost comments I.N.F.N. Naples The difference in price between the two solutions, after the HV and LV descoping, is less than 50K€ that is not enough to push forward the HV on the detector. Have the HV in Control Room means (EASY ACCESS): • Possibility to disconnect an high-current or sparking bigaps without switching of the other bigap; • Increase the granularity when more HV boards will be available; • Increase the number of HV channel when/if some station will drawn to much current. We hope to increase asap the number of HV boards from 60 to 80 in order to decoupling the RB3 and RB4 stations. Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  36. Conclusions I I.N.F.N. Naples We have designed a “reduced” HV and LV systems for budget limitation, keeping our requirements, consisting of: • HV: from 1020 to 432  80/60 boards  20/10 crates • LV: from 1560 to 720  60 boards  20 crates They cost now: 220K€ (LV) + 400/450 K€ (HV) • We hope to upgrade the HV system as soon as possible at least to decoupling the RB3 and RB4 stations (from 60 to 80 boards). • The two options (Detector and Control Room) have an estimated cost difference of less than 50K€. • The HV in Control Room is a much better solution from any point of view. Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

  37. Conclusions II I.N.F.N. Naples • Have a common LV (HV) system for CMS is a very important step forward a cost reduction and system simplification. • Have the LV in control room means: long cables (cooling), patch panels, hardware/software to develop @ similar price and so we thing is not the best solution. • For the HV system, the CAEN is, up to now, the only company able to give us a very high quality system in a so short time. We need prototypes to test (B/rad/stress) for the 2003 in order to put the order in the second part of the 2004 and install the system in the 2005. Pierluigi Paolucci - I.N.F.N. Naples

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