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Marc Weber Rutherford Appleton Laboratory Bob Ely, Sergio Zimmermann, Paul Lujan LBNL Rong-Shyang Lu Academia Sinica Taiwan Shielding and Electrical Performance of Silicon Sensor Supermodules developed for the CDF Run IIb detector upgrade
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What is a supermodule ? highly integrated mechanical, electrical and thermal structure; single-sided silicon strip sensors on top and bottom; 66 cm long; 3072 channels; low mass: 150 g; 1.7% of a radiation length 4-chip hybrids silicon sensors front side back side
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How to use a supermodule ? supermodules supported by bulkheads only => minimizes material services at one end only => 1.2 m long 2-barrel construction Interesting design also for future hadron colliders Supermodules or staves Barrel Bulkhead 2 barrels with 192 supermodules around beampipe (+ Layer 0) for CDF Run IIb: Services
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A closer look: schematic side view “simple” layer structure: SVX4 chip on BeO hybrid on single- sided sensor on bus cable on carbon fiber/foam core hybrid is wire-bonded to bus cable through 3 mm gap between pairs of sensors bus cable copper traces stop after reaching 3. hybrid 25/50 μm thick aluminum shields under each sensor pair, connected to hybrid ground (AG=DG=HG) top and bottom side nearly symmetric, but typically axial strips on top and 1.2 stereo strips on bottom
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Advantages compact, light weight, radiation hard components “easy” to build => fast construction, cheap, reliable ideal for assembly: integrated services, modular detector proximity of sensors and bus cable can cause systematic pedestal shifts (“pick-up”) => “fake hits”, noise occupancy, etc. CDF runs in deadtime-less mode (data acquisition during “noisy” digitize and readout) to increase trigger bandwidth requires understanding and suppression of conductive and capacitive interference mechanisms (see IEEE Trans. Sci., vol. 51, no. 3, pp. 987-993, June 2004) Challenges
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single 18 μm thick copper layer (minimize material) 25 μm or 50 μm thick aluminum shield between copper and silicon sensors wide power traces; joint digital grounds; etc. to minimize IR drops Layout of a low-tech component crucial for system performance Bus cable layout
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Electrical Performance plot shows pedestal of arbitrary channels as a function of time/ chip mode every channel with “signal” above average pedestal by “2-3” x noise will be read out and used in tracking algorithms BE_CLK :______________________________ COMP_RST:XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX___________ RREF_SEL:XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX________ FE_MODE :87XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX90XXX FE_CLK :T______T______T______T______T_ L1A :XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX PRD1 :_____XXXXX________________XXXX Excellent performance ! but one puzzle remained … a bucket bits of a control pattern Noise: ~2ADC counts/1000 e
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Electrical Performance plot shows pedestal of all channels at arbitrary time (front-side, 25 μm shield, 3 hybrids superimposed) every channel with “signal” above average pedestal by “2-3” x noise will be read out and used in tracking algorithms What is this structure ? ( 50 ADC = 1 MIP) Pick-up above FE clock line !
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Different experimental setups plot shows pedestal of all channels at an arbitrary time no pick-up if: 1.2 stereo strips (at supermodule bottom side) no clock lines under sensor (at 3. sensor pair) 50 μm thick aluminum shield (final layout) => CDF supermodule design OK, but What is the interference mechanism ? ( 50 ADC = 1 MIP)
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Transverse supermodule X-section (strips and clock traces run into slide plane, not to scale !) layer thicknesses: Sensor: 320 μm Adhesive: 25 μm Kapton: 25 μm Adhesive: 25 μm Aluminum: 25/50 μm Adhesive: 25 μm Copper: 18 μm Kapton: 25 μm … Would like to understand width and size of pick-up CLOCKCLOCK_B Sensor p-implants, AC coupling, ~40 μm pitch, every 2. strip is read out 75 μm width/ 100 μm space
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front-end clock signal => time-dependent magnetic fields => Eddy currents in aluminum shield => current produces magnetic field seen by the silicon strips adjacent strips form loop (through preamplifier ground and interstrip capacitance) => time-dependent magnetic flux perpendicular to loop leads to emf => net current into preamplifier: “pick-up” Interference mechanism L/2 Strip Z axis X Axis - L/2 Interstrip capacitance
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Calculation of B Analytical approach following Smythe: Eddy currents in infinite plane sheet by image method x is coordinate perpendicular to shield and strips; z is coordinate along strips z Numerical approach using Maxwell 2D program from Ansoft: decent agreement of results Various approximations: only 10 Fourier harmonics to parameterize time- dependence of fields; consider only 19 adjacent strips; use only dominant pole to describe SVX4 preamp rise times; >10% uncertainty in clock driver currents; 2D model; ignored carbon fiber at supermodule core; etc.
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Comparison with simulation data averaged over 180 events, excellent data quality here “extreme” scenario chosen to maximize effect: thin aluminum shield ( 25 μm); max. driver current ( ~20 mA); min. rise time width and size of simulation ~30% too small (in our approximations), but Main effect reproduced by simulation Data Simulation
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What influences size of interference ? Clock driver currents: pick-up proportional to driver current; reduction by factor 2 for minimum current Aluminum shield thickness (50 μm and 25 μm) : Simulation: reduction by factor ~5 with 50 μm shield Data: no pick-up for thick shield (in standard clock pattern) Preamp bandwidth/rise times: pick-up reduced with increasing preamp rise time in data and simulation (by > factor 2) [ Clock frequencies: little variation in data when reducing clock frequency from 50 MHz by factor 4.5 ] Huge collection of data, so far always consistent with simulation
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Given a quantitative model of typical interference effects: less prototyping needed can optimize system components ( transceivers, readout chips, bus cable) at early design stages simple design choices can have big effect: e.g. small 1.2 angle between strips and clock traces (rotate strips or rotate traces !)
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Summary/Conclusions local pedestal fluctuations in strips above a clock trace observed in prototype supermodules Time-dependent magnetic fields, associated with clock signals, induce an emf in adjacent strips, which leads to a net charge flow into preamp Numerical and analytical calculations of this effect agree with the data the fields can be suppressed efficiently by a thin aluminum shield Quantitative estimate of interference effects possible, gives superior system design Electrical performance of CDF Run IIb supermodules is excellent Compact packaging can be combined with deadtime-less operation
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Electrical Performance: prototype plot shows pedestal of arbitrary channel as a function of time/ chip mode every channel with “signal” above average pedestal by “2-3” x noise will be read out and used in tracking algorithms BE_CLK :______________________________ COMP_RST:XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX___________ RREF_SEL:XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX________ FE_MODE :87XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX90XXX FE_CLK :T______T______T______T______T_ L1A :XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX PRD1 :_____XXXXX________________XXXX Fair performance (if RTPS), but final design is much better ! a bucket bits of a control pattern
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Interstrip capacitance L/2 Strip Z axis X Axis - L/2
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