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Old ROD + new BOC design plans

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Presentation on theme: "Old ROD + new BOC design plans"— Presentation transcript:

1 Old ROD + new BOC design plans
T. Flick University Wuppertal ATLAS Tracker Upgrade Week CERN

2 Overview Reminder of present design
Recommendations of System Design TF Consequences of using the “old” ROD BOC card requirements and design plan Open (not covered) issues old ROD + new BOC

3 Present Layout Add/adopt components for higher speed on-detector
Exchange BOC Keep ROD and TIM TTC: From off-detector to on-detector, BPM encoded clock (40 MHz) and data (40 Mb/s) signal Data: From on-detector to off-detector, 40 Mb/s or 80 Mb/s NRZ signal. old ROD + new BOC

4 Recommendations System Design (for sLHC) Taskforce set up a recommendation document for the IBL readout system: Summary of IBL I/O Recommendations TTC Optical Downlink BPM encoded: 40 MHz clock and 40 Mb/s commands Electrical links DORIC to FE-I4 2x LVDS: 40 MHz clock & 40 Mb/s commands Each link drives two FE-I4 chips Data Output Electrical link FE-I4 to VDC 1x LVDS / FE-I4 at 160 Mbps Encoded as 8bit/10bit Optical Uplink: 1 optical link/FE-I4 at 160 Mb/s old ROD + new BOC

5 Recommendations BOC/ROD TTC: Data: 8bit/10bit decoded in BOC
40 MHz clock & 40 Mb/s data BPM encoded as present system Data: Input 160 Mb/s input links 8bit/10bit decoded in BOC Data passed to ROD as 4 x 40 Mb/s streams 8 input links per BOC/ROD old ROD + new BOC

6 Use the “old” ROD Present ROD can be used
It needs 40 Mb/s input streams Can drive out 160 MB/s data due to S-Link capability New firmware can be used, but would not really be needed though Readout Driver (ROD) old ROD + new BOC

7 Consequences 40 MHz clock sent to detector
Need of clock multiplier on-detector to achieve the 160 Mb/s upstream (need at least 80 MHz clock on FE-chip) Encoding on both, down- and up-link BOC must decode the data 8 input links at 160 Mb/s can be handled Need to produce many cards with few channels Install 4 new crates for readout hardware old ROD + new BOC

8 New BOC Requirements Transmitting section unchanged (only in channels)
S-Link section unchanged Clock section needs to be adopted to higher clocks (160 MHz clock) Receiving section must handle 160 Mb/s input stream must split 160 Mb/s into 4x 40 Mb/s streams Decoding of 8/10b data (and clock?) Phase and sampling threshold adoption Synchronize data to ROD clock Present BOC card Rx Plugin Tx Plugin old ROD + new BOC

9 Open Issues 1 TTC link per 2 FE chip (while 1 Data link per single FE): Implication on modularity 8 data links per BOC/ROD are fixed maximum 4 TTC links per BOC/ROD? Fibre ribbon splitting?? Channel wise control of VCSEL and PiN diodes Optical components, coming from where? Connector layout Communication protocol No time for new ASICs! On-detector clock multiplier old ROD + new BOC

10 Design Plans Installation
Card Requirements (W) Wuppertal and Heidelberg groups plan to work together on this *) Lay down requirements in first half of 2009, then: Card design work will be done in Heidelberg Test system development in Wuppertal Test work can be shared Planed is prototyping of 2 versions until 2011 and the production until 2012. Card Design (HD) Production Proto (HD) Series (W) Testing (W/HD) Installation *) Funding decision pending, expected soon old ROD + new BOC

11 Schedule Aim is to be ready early 2012, latest mid 2012.
It will be difficult to get series BOCs for system-test usage before. Prototypes for system-tests should be available. old ROD + new BOC

12 Conclusion Old ROD can be used with a newly designed BOC card for reading out the IBL at 160 Mb/s per FE-chip. Need 64 new BOC cards /RODs for IBL (presently we have 132 pairs) Need 4 new crates in 2 racks to house the card pairs BOC design and production by Wuppertal / Heidelberg until early 2012 is foreseen, including 1 or 2 prototypes. Time is short, we need to be very efficient! old ROD + new BOC


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