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Electronics for the m?eg experiment

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Electronics for the m eg experiment Short introduction and status Trigger electronics DAQ electronics Slow Control Developments useful for other experiments – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Electronics for the m?eg experiment


1
Electronics for the m?eg experiment
  • Short introduction and status
  • Trigger electronics
  • DAQ electronics
  • Slow Control

Developments useful for other experiments
2
Search for m?eg at 10-14
  • LFV Process forbidden by SM
  • n oscillations expected to enhance LFV rate
  • Present limit 1.2 10-11 (MEGA)
  • SUSY Theories 10-12
  • Required
  • m stopping rate 108/s
  • Resolutions (all FWHM)
  • DEe 0.7
  • DEg 1.4 _at_ 52.8 MeV
  • Dqeg 12 mrad
  • Dteg 150ps

MEG Detector
3
Detector Design
Tests Design
2002
Assembly
2003
Engineering Run
2004
2005
Data taking
2006
2007
. . .
4
Cryogenics Design
5
Status update
  • New xenon purification with SAES mono-torr getter
    filter. Should reduce all non-noble gases to lt
    ppb level
  • Very low noise on PMTs (1mV peak-to-peak) ? 0.2
    resolution when summing all 240 PMTs
  • PMT gain equalized reproducible with LED method
    to 3, limited by HV stability
  • Beam time at TERAS starts today

6
Trigger Requirements
  • Beam rate 108 s-1
  • Fast LXe energy sum gt 45MeV 2?103 s-1
  • g interaction point
  • e hit point in timing counter
  • time correlation g e 200 s-1
  • angular corrlation g e 20 s-1

M.C.
7
LXe energy sum
  • Total 800 PMTs
  • Common noise contributes significantly to analog
    sum
  • AC coupling ? Baseline drift
  • How to evaluate q,f of shower center?

8
Digital Trigger
  • Commodity electronics available
  • 100 MHz FADC 10 bit (10)
  • FPGA 100k Gates, 90kB, 230 MHz, 300 pins (100)
  • SRAM 10ns, 128kB (30)
  • LVDS 200Mb/s/line, (2)
  • VME32/VME64

FADC
PMT
FADC
FPGA
Trigger
PMT
FADC
SRAM
PMT

9
Baseline Subtraction
Baseline Subtraction
100 MHz Clock
Latch
Latch
Latch
Latch
10 bit
Calibrated and linearized signal
Baseline subtracted signal
Latch

LUT 10x10
S
-
S
S
-

Uses 120 out of 5000 logic cells ? 8
channels/FPGA use 20 of chip
S
S
Latch
Baseline Register
ltthr
10
QT Algorithm
original waveform
t
  • Inspired by H1 Fast Track Trigger (A. Schnöning)
  • Difference of Samples ( 1st derivation)
  • Hit region defined when DOS is above threshold
  • Integration of original signal in hit region
  • Pedestal evaluated in region before hit
  • Time interpolated using maximum value and two
    neighbor values in LUT ? 1ns resolution for 10ns
    sampling time

Region for pedestal evaluation
integration area
smoothed and differentiated (Difference Of
Samples)
Threshold in DOS
11
Finding center of g shower
e (f(center)-j(max. PMT) lt 3.5) gt 99
? Enough to find PMT with max. value
12
Schema for max. finding
8
Latch
8
index
LSB
8
Latch
Index bit
A
AltB
MSB
Latch
B
8
value
8
Latch
Index bit
Latch
A
AgtB
8
B
8
Latch
Index bit
A
AltB
B
13
e - g coincidence
14
Trigger latency
ADC
BS
S
ADC
BS
S
gt45MeV
ADC
BS
S
ADC
BS
. . .
AND
. . .
Max
. . .
Max
Df
Max
fe
10 stages 1024 chn
Tns 0 50 100 110
120..200 220 230
15
VME Boards
Type1
Type2
VME Interface (Cypress)
3.3V 2.5V
FADC
VME Interface (Cypress)
3.3V 2.5V
LVDS
FADC
LVDS
8 channels
FPGA
FADC
FPGA
LVDS
FADC
LVDS
FADC
FPGA
FPGA
LVDS
SRAM
SRAM
FADC
LVDS
8 channels
FADC
LVDS
FADC
LVDS
SRAM
FPGA
SRAM
FPGA
LVDS
LVDS
LVDS
FPGA
FPGA
LVDS
LVDS
LVDS
LVDS
LVDS
LVDS
clck, clear
48 bits output
16
Board hierarchy
  • 42 Type 1 boards for 600 channels
  • 6 Type 2 boards (VME 9U)
  • 3 VME crates (2x6U, 2x9U)
  • Total latency 350ns
  • Processing power 600 100 MHz 10 bit 75 GB/s
  • Golden Rule plan for FPGAs with 2x gates
  • Totally re-programmable
  • Estimated costs 230k
  • Made by INFN, Pisa

17
Prototype board
Peter Dick
FPGA
Signal- Generator
ADC
DAC
18
DAQ Hardware Requirements
n
PMT sum
0.511 MeV
m?eg
Michel edge
51.5 MeV
EMeV
50 51 52
t
100ns
(m?enn)2 g
  • gs hitting different parts of LXe can be
    separated if gt 2 PMTs apart (15 cm)
  • Timely separated gs need waveform digitizing gt
    300 MHz
  • If waveform digitizing gives timing lt100ps, no
    TDCs are needed

g
e
m
19
Fast waveform Digitizing
  • Trigger boards can directly be used for Drift
    Chamber (10ns sampling ? 1ns interpolation ?
    2-3ns chamber resolution)
  • Waveforms stored in SRAM, sparcified readout via
    LVDS
  • Calorimeter readout needs sampling with gt 1GHz

VME Interface (Cypress)
3.3V 2.5V
FADC
FADC
8 channels
FPGA
FADC
FADC
FADC
FPGA
SRAM
FADC
8 channels
FADC
FADC
SRAM
FPGA
2GHz
40MHz, 12 bit
FPGA
DSC
FADC
LVDS
FPGA
Analog Waveform Domino Sampling Chip
SRAM
LVDS
LVDS
clck, clear
48 bits output
20
pb Domino Sampling Chip
  • 0.5 1.2 GHz sampling speed
  • 128 sampling cells
  • Readout at 5 MHz, 12 bit
  • 100 CHF/channel
  • Needed
  • 2.5 GHz sampling speed
  • Circular domino wave
  • 1024 sampling cells
  • 40 MHz readout
  • lt 100ps accuracy

21
Domino Ring Sampler (DRS)
  • Free running domino wave, stopped with trigger
  • Sampling speed 2 GHz (500ps/bin)
  • Readout 40 MHz 12 bit
  • 1024 bins ? 150ns waveform 350ns delay

22
Domino Cell
domino enable
  • Tail-biting mechanism to chop off domino wave
  • Coupling in of Domino Start in all cells for
    homogeneity
  • Minimal number of components in critical path
  • Global Domino Enable
  • Capacitor to slow down speed

23
Domino Wave stability
NMOSltPMOS w/o tail biting
NMOSltPMOS with tail-biting
NMOSPMOS
starving
widened
stable
24
Gate sampling
signal
  • Domino stop only accurate by one cell (500ps)
  • Need 50ps timing resolution

Trigger gate sampling
trigger gate
500ps
50ps
25
DAQ Board
  • 9 channels ? 1024 bins / 40 MHz 230 ms ?
    acceptable dead time
  • Zero suppression in FPGA
  • QT Algorithm in FPGA (store waveform if
    multi-hit)
  • Readout controller in FPGA (instead pattern
    generator)

8 channel DRS
VME Interface (Cypress)
3.3V 2.5V
40 MHz 12 bit
8 channel DRS
FPGA
FADC
8 inputs
FADC
8 channel DRS
SRAM
FPGA
8 channel DRS
FPGA
FADC
SRAM
Trigger Input
SRAM
shift register
trigger gate
3 state switches
Board inter-connect
SRAM
SRAM
Trigger BUS (2nd level tr.)
26
Status DRS
  • Simulation finished in AMS 0.35m process
  • Layout started
  • Switch to 0.25m process
  • First version summer 02
  • Readout with trigger prototype board
  • Costs per channel25 (board) 6 (chip)

27
DAQ Muegamma
Split and Preamplifier
Trigger Board
LXe e
PMT
trigger
FADC FPGA
DSC
CPU
40MHz
2GHz
Waveform or QT readout
DAQ board
optional 2nd level trigger
trigger
CPU
Trigger Board
100MHz
wires strips
DC
Waveform or QT readout
28
Redefinition of DAQ
DSC
GHz
FADC
100 MHz
FPGA
SRAM
29
Applications in other experiments
  • Technology in house (pool)
  • Substitution of old electronics (ADC, Scaler,
    Discriminators)
  • LVDS-NIM converter and VME necessary
  • Integration in new experiments

Beam Counters
VME Interface (Cypress)
3.3V 2.5V
FADC
PMT
Dttrigger 10ns DtTDC ? 1ns
FADC
PMT
FPGA
FADC
PMT
FADC
FADC
FPGA
SRAM
FADC
calorimeter
FADC
FADC
SRAM
FPGA
LVDS
FPGA
LVDS
LVDS
30
Slow Control
HV
Temperature, pressure,
Valves
12345
Terminal Server
PLC
RS232
GPIB
???
15 C
Ethernet
heater
MIDAS DAQ
31
Slow Control Bus
HV
Temperature, pressure,
Valves
heater
MIDAS DAQ
32
LXe calorimeter HV requirements
  • 12 stage bases _at_ 1000V
  • Dg (DU)12 ?? 1V accuracy 1.2 gain variation
  • Need lt0.3V accuracy over full temperature range
  • Low ripple
  • 1000 channels 200k commercially
  • Fast readout for monitoring (RS232 would take 3
    min to read)

33
Field Bus Solutions
  • CAN, Profibus, LON available
  • Node with ADC 100
  • Interoperatibility not guaranteed
  • Protocol overhead
  • Local CPU? User programmable?
  • How to integrate in HV (CAEN use CAENET)

Reinhard Schmidt
34
RS485 bus
  • Similar to RS-232 but
  • Up to 256 (1/8 load) units can be connected to a
    single segment
  • single line, half duplex
  • differential twisted pair
  • Segment length up to km
  • MAX 1483 transceiver chip for HV control
  • MAX 1480 for opto decoupled applications
  • Use repeater to extend to many segments

35
Generic Node
  • ADuC812 / C8051F000 Microcontrollers
  • MAX 1483 Tranceiver
  • Flat ribbon connector
  • Power through bus
  • Costs 30
  • Piggy back board

36
2 versions
BUS Oriented
  • Generic node with signal conditioning (OP-AMPs)
  • Sub-master with power supply and PC connection
    (Parallel Port, USB planned)
  • Integration on sensors, in crates
  • RS232 node planned

Crate Oriented
  • 19 crate with custom backplane
  • Generic node as piggy-back
  • Cards for analog IO / digital IO / temperature /
    220V /
  • Crate connects to parallel port (USB planned)

37
Protocol
  • Asynchronous 345 kBaud
  • 16-bit addressing (65536 nodes)
  • CRC-code for error detection
  • Optional acknowledge
  • Concept of channels and configuration parameters
    (256 each per node)

address command
node
command
LSB
MSB
CRC
channel1
param1
ADC
1 Byte
channel2
param2
ADC
write data
param3
channel3
command
channel
value
CRC
port
38
Midas Slow Control Bus
  • 256 nodes, 65536 with one level of repeaters
  • Bus length 500m opto-isolated
  • Boards for voltage, current, thermo couples,
    voltage output, TTL IO, 220V output, available
    from pool on request
  • Readout speed 0.3s for 1000 channels
  • C library, command-line utility, Midas driver,
    LabView driver
  • Connects to parallel port, USB planned
  • Nodes are self-documenting
  • Configuration parameters in EEPROM on node
  • Node CPU can operate autonomously for interlock
    and regulation (PID) tasks (C programmable)
  • Nodes can be reprogrammed over network
  • http//midas.psi.ch/mscb

39
LabView Logger
  • Used for POLDI detector HV and gas monitoring
  • Graph, logging and alarm notification

40
High Voltage System
41
HV performance
  • Regulates common HV source
  • 0-2400V, 1mA
  • DAC 16bit, ADC 14bit
  • Current trip 10ms
  • Self-calibration with two high accuracy reference
    voltages
  • Accuracy lt0.3V absolute
  • Boards with 12 channels, crates with 192 channels
  • 30/channel

Prototype
42
Conclusions
  • Lots of new electronics for Muegamma
  • Can be useful for other experiments
  • Knowledge and support in-house
  • Open to suggestions and modifications

Credits to Reinhard Schmidt and Peter Dick
43
Muegamma Web Site
Transparencies
http//meg.psi.ch/doc/talks/s_ritt/feb02_psi
Cake
http//kochbuch.unix-ag.uni-kl.de/bin/rezept?17731
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