TY - JOUR
T1 - Comparative evaluation of analogue front-end designs for the CMS Inner Tracker at the High Luminosity LHC
AU - Emriskova, Natalia
AU - Tuominen, Eija
AU - Tracker Group of the CMS Collaboration
N1 - Members of the CMS Collaboration Tracker Group are listed in the publication.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 CERN for the benefit of the CMS collaboration.
PY - 2021/12
Y1 - 2021/12
N2 - The CMS Inner Tracker, made of silicon pixel modules, will be entirely replaced prior to the start of the High Luminosity LHC period. One of the crucial components of the new Inner Tracker system is the readout chip, being developed by the RD53 Collaboration, and in particular its analogue front-end, which receives the signal from the sensor and digitizes it. Three different analogue front-ends (Synchronous, Linear, and Differential) were designed and implemented in the RD53A demonstrator chip. A dedicated evaluation program was carried out to select the most suitable design to build a radiation tolerant pixel detector able to sustain high particle rates with high efficiency and a small fraction of spurious pixel hits. The test results showed that all three analogue front-ends presented strong points, but also limitations. The Differential front-end demonstrated very low noise, but the threshold tuning became problematic after irradiation. Moreover, a saturation in the preamplifier feedback loop affected the return of the signal to baseline and thus increased the dead time. The Synchronous front-end showed very good timing performance, but also higher noise. For the Linear front-end all of the parameters were within specification, although this design had the largest time walk. This limitation was addressed and mitigated in an improved design. The analysis of the advantages and disadvantages of the three front-ends in the context of the CMS Inner Tracker operation requirements led to the selection of the improved design Linear front-end for integration in the final CMS readout chip.
AB - The CMS Inner Tracker, made of silicon pixel modules, will be entirely replaced prior to the start of the High Luminosity LHC period. One of the crucial components of the new Inner Tracker system is the readout chip, being developed by the RD53 Collaboration, and in particular its analogue front-end, which receives the signal from the sensor and digitizes it. Three different analogue front-ends (Synchronous, Linear, and Differential) were designed and implemented in the RD53A demonstrator chip. A dedicated evaluation program was carried out to select the most suitable design to build a radiation tolerant pixel detector able to sustain high particle rates with high efficiency and a small fraction of spurious pixel hits. The test results showed that all three analogue front-ends presented strong points, but also limitations. The Differential front-end demonstrated very low noise, but the threshold tuning became problematic after irradiation. Moreover, a saturation in the preamplifier feedback loop affected the return of the signal to baseline and thus increased the dead time. The Synchronous front-end showed very good timing performance, but also higher noise. For the Linear front-end all of the parameters were within specification, although this design had the largest time walk. This limitation was addressed and mitigated in an improved design. The analysis of the advantages and disadvantages of the three front-ends in the context of the CMS Inner Tracker operation requirements led to the selection of the improved design Linear front-end for integration in the final CMS readout chip.
KW - Analogue electronic circuits
KW - Front-end electronics for detector readout
KW - Particle tracking detectors (Solid-state detectors)
KW - Radiation-hard electronics
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85122892110&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1088/1748-0221/16/12/P12014
DO - 10.1088/1748-0221/16/12/P12014
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85122892110
SN - 1748-0221
VL - 16
JO - Journal of Instrumentation
JF - Journal of Instrumentation
IS - 12
M1 - P12014
ER -