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11 October 2002Paul Dauncey - CDR Introduction1 CDR Introduction and Overview Paul Dauncey Imperial College London
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11 October 2002Paul Dauncey - CDR Introduction2 Electromagnetic (ECAL) and hadronic (HCAL) calorimeters Final aim is for a linear collider after 2010 Test prototypes in beam starting in mid 2004 Several tests, running (not continuously) for around 1 year in total UK proposal to build ECAL back-end readout electronics Front-end electronics supplied by Orsay/Paris group No proposals for HCAL back-end yet Front-end not very firm but some effort there Adapt ECAL readout electronics for HCAL back-end? No proposals for trigger, beam monitoring, etc, either Need to be flexible to accommodate uncertainties here Main aim of CALICE is a beam test
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11 October 2002Paul Dauncey - CDR Introduction3 1 1cm 2 silicon diode pads, each diode is a channel 18 18 diodes = 324 channels/layer 30 layers = 9720 channels Front-end electronics is VFE chips on VFE-PCB’s 6 chips/PCB, 18 channels/chip and 108 channels/PCB VFE chip is charge integrating amplifier with CR-RC shaper Requires 14 bits dynamic range, 10 bits resolution The 18 channels/VFE chip are multiplexed onto one output line as analogue voltages Readout needs to digitise signal at peak = 180ns VFE has calibration circuit to inject charge at input stage ECAL system
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11 October 2002Paul Dauncey - CDR Introduction4 Interface is at VFE-PCB connector Time dependent signals through connector shown below Sample-and-hold timing critical, needed to ~10ns All others less severe, needed to ~100ns VFE-PCB interface
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11 October 2002Paul Dauncey - CDR Introduction5 Trigger using scintillators in beam Trigger logic not completely trivial Need to hold off further triggers until each event read out Need to be able to veto trigger if too close (~1 s) to last activity Need to be able to abort trigger if activity soon (~100ns) after trigger Need to know if beam present or not Need several types of trigger (beam, cosmic, calibration, pedestal, etc.) selectable from DAQ Also (potentially) need trigger fan-out to HCAL readout with adjustable delay No proposal for a CALICE group to build this (yet) Have to retain large degree of flexibility given uncertainties here Some/all of logic could be built into readout/DAQ system Trigger interface
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11 October 2002Paul Dauncey - CDR Introduction6 Need to read all channels for every event Could do threshold suppression in principle Need to see pedestals and noise at least in some subsample Allow for inclusion of HCAL, trigger and beam monitor Event numbers required Need around 200 set-ups (particle types, energies, HCAL options, entrance angles, etc.) Need ~3 10 5 events for each set-up Total sample ~6 10 7 events Rates required to take these events in a reasonable time Need around 100 Hz sustained rate Given beam structure, this requires around 1kHz peak rate Data sizes: event will be around 25 kBytes Total data size around 1.5 TBytes Data acquisition interface
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11 October 2002Paul Dauncey - CDR Introduction7 Cables from VFE-PCB’s direct to 15 VME readout boards External trigger to 1 VME trigger board, then distributed via customised backplane Also need a test board for debugging readout cards Proposed system
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11 October 2002Paul Dauncey - CDR Introduction8 There are (at least) three HCAL options Analogue readout: scintillating tiles, ~1500 channels Digital readout: RPC’s or GEM’s, ~350k channels Analogue option may use VFE chip (on different PCB) Simple (in principle) to use same readout electronics Not clear if all 18 channels/VFE chip used in this option Minimum of 3 extra readout boards needed, maybe more Digital options will share front-end readout 38 layers, each with zero suppression at front-end Expected total event size around 2kBytes No proposal for back-end electronics; also use ECAL readout? Basically need an LVDS I/O data path Minimum of 7 extra readout boards needed, maybe more Need to allow for multiple crates and at least two trigger boards HCAL implications
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11 October 2002Paul Dauncey - CDR Introduction9 VME crate specifics Customise crate for trigger and addressing Use some of 64 spare pins on J2 Four LVDS signals bussed on backplane System clock (~12.5MHz) Trigger Two spares Geographical slot addressing Six TTL pins with unique value for each slot Six bits are needed to cover two crates = 42 slots Power supplies: need 3.3V rather than 5V For LVDS I/O signals FPGA’s run at 1.8V or 2.5V, stepped down from 3.3V May be issue with non-UK readout (beam monitoring, etc)?
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11 October 2002Paul Dauncey - CDR Introduction10 Summary External interfaces are still in flux VFE-PCB reasonably firm Trigger and HCAL very uncertain Basic system concept laid out here Will have to react to changes in interfaces Hopefully no major architectural changes needed Following talks lay out proposed system in more detail Readout and trigger board internals Final talk will discuss cost, effort, schedule
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