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0.13 m m Pixel Test Chip Results. Seung Ji, Bob Ely, Daniel Hallberg, Kevin Einsweiler, M. Garcia-Sciveres. 0.13 m m Test chip. Submitted in 2004 before FE-I3 design team dissolved. Bench tested and comparisons with simulation in 2005
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0.13mm Pixel Test Chip Results Seung Ji, Bob Ely, Daniel Hallberg, Kevin Einsweiler, M. Garcia-Sciveres LECC 06 -- 0.13u pixel test chip -- M.Garcia-Sciveres
0.13mm Test chip • Submitted in 2004 before FE-I3 design team dissolved. • Bench tested and comparisons with simulation in 2005 • First radiation tests in 2006 at LBNL 8” cyclotron, using 55MeV p+ and 16 MeV light ions for SEU studies. • Tentative plans for 20GeV p+ at CERN 10/06. 2.5mm LECC 06 -- 0.13u pixel test chip -- M.Garcia-Sciveres
7 3 Test chip contents 1 • 20 pixel analog section: a 0th order probe of technology issues. • 0.25mm enclosed geometry layout redrawn in 0.13mm with no scaling • Layout then adjusted to have a consistent 0.13mm simulation (no DRC errors and stable operation) • Main adjustment required was to use “low power option” transistors, which have leakage currents of same order as 0.25mm technology. Otherwise trim DACS and some current sources could not be implemented. LECC 06 -- 0.13u pixel test chip -- M.Garcia-Sciveres
Test chip contents 2 • Digital registers and latches: a test of SEU behavior Bank of triple redundant latches Error flag Parity bit Common in Dedicated out Shift register (CERN D-flipflops) LECC 06 -- 0.13u pixel test chip -- M.Garcia-Sciveres
Analog section evaluation • Scope traces of preamp output of pixel 0 • Comparator output of other 19 pixels allowing threshold “S” curve scans. LECC 06 -- 0.13u pixel test chip -- M.Garcia-Sciveres
Analog results summary • Generally works as simulated (not bad considering there was no performance tuning) • Note, however, that there is no capacitive load at the input and no DC leakage current. This test chip does not allow to explore these parameters. • Main difference between 0.13mm and 0.25mm is the intrinsic (i.e. untuned) threshold dispersion • Average over 5 test chips was 1700e- • Value for 0.25mm production chip is 650e- • This is crudely understood: • Low power transistors used have 3x worse matching than regular ones. • Present manufacturer data on matching is much better than when chip was submitted. • Circuit is sensitive to mismatch • Now expect present models to be able to predict this type of effect • But models are made for linear transistors • Not clear how well matching data applies to annular devices. • Threshold dispersion Monte Carlo simulation not done with present models • Noise without detector load:125e- (~same as 0.25mm) LECC 06 -- 0.13u pixel test chip -- M.Garcia-Sciveres
Irradiations • All carried out at LBNL 88” cyclotron in 2006 • 55 MeV protons for total dose • Reached only 70MRad (Si), hoped for 200. • 16 MeV ions for SEU upset studies • N, Ne, Ar, Cu, Kr covering LET range 1.2 – 27 MeV/(mg/cm2) LECC 06 -- 0.13u pixel test chip -- M.Garcia-Sciveres
Irradiation setup Note analog scan with beam LECC 06 -- 0.13u pixel test chip -- M.Garcia-Sciveres
Total dose effect on performance - Negligible • 5x1014 p+/cm2 ~ 70 Mrad (Si) • No change in noise (~120e-) • Threshold dispersion does not have much to tell us- can’t measure it in real time electrons electrons electrons LECC 06 -- 0.13u pixel test chip -- M.Garcia-Sciveres
Various latch designs tested for SEU #0: CERN rad hard D-flip-flop #1: Cross coupled “DICE” latch using standard cell inverters #2: Custom drawn conventional latch #3: Cross coupled “DICE” latch using custom drawn inverters #4: Artisan library D-flip-flop #5: Scaled version of pixel production chip global register. LECC 06 -- 0.13u pixel test chip -- M.Garcia-Sciveres
Single latch LET threshold results 10-7 10-8 10-9 Cross Section (cm2) 10-10 10-11 Types 3 & 5 had insufficient upset rates. LECC 06 -- 0.13u pixel test chip -- M.Garcia-Sciveres
About triple redundant cells • Consider first ideal case of single latches completely independent, and ion energy deposition point-like. • In this case, rate of triple redundant cell upsets is a calculable probability problem, given single latch cross section. • By comparing measurement and calculation we test the initial assumption • We expect this assumption to hold for slow ions (no d-rays or showers). • We expect (based on .25u pixel chip) that high energy hadrons would instead produce showers that introduce correlations (upset two neighbor latches with same shower)- but this irradiation has not been done yet! LECC 06 -- 0.13u pixel test chip -- M.Garcia-Sciveres
Triple redundant prediction • (For each test all latches were “prepared” in a pure 0 or 1 state) • For small time the number of single latches upset vs. time is approximately linear, U(t) ~ 3NFst (U(t)<<3N) • Only triplets with one upset latch are candidates to produce a triple redundant error (TRE). The rate of TRE is therefore, E(t) ~ 2(3NFst).Fst = 6N(Fst)2 (E(t)<<N) • This is only the first order term. In reality, U(t) = 3N[s1/(s1+s2)](1-e-F(s1+s2)t), and E(t) still more complicated, • But interesting behavior (correlations) are present at lowest order. • Plot absolute prediction (6N(Fst)2) together with data of TRE vs. fluence for small t (N is in the range 224-266) • The way TRE’s were counted was by monitoring the parity function for each chain of triple redundant registers. LECC 06 -- 0.13u pixel test chip -- M.Garcia-Sciveres
CERN-D X-std Cust-D Art-D -1s +1s -1s +1s TRE data vs. prediction(for all 0 initial state) LECC 06 -- 0.13u pixel test chip -- M.Garcia-Sciveres
SEU interpretation • Expectation that upsets in single cells from ions are uncorrelated is generally confirmed. • Register 2 discrepancy could be due to counting technique used, but otherwise not understood • (Two upsets within a single sampling period lead to no change in parity) • Extreme hardness of DICE cross-coupled cells can also be understood in term of the point-like, independent nature of slow ions • Writing a DICE cell requires a simultaneous signal on 2 different nodes • We now need 20GeV p+ results, which involve extended energy deposits leading to correlations in SEU and upsets of DICE cells • as observed in present 0.25u generation, but • Quantitative results for 0.13u would be very interesting. • Note that TR by itself is not a cure for SEU. For long term storage TR must be coupled with error correction on a “short” time scale, defined by 2Fst<< 1 LECC 06 -- 0.13u pixel test chip -- M.Garcia-Sciveres
Conclusions • Useful lessons for next generation deep sub-micron pixel chip • Matching is a critical issue that must be addressed from the start • Some steps to quantifying SEU effects for different latch implementation options. Future work • Possible SEU run at CERN 20 GeV p+ beam (coll. with CPPM) • Next iteration 0.13 test chip • Focus on New, ground-up, amplifier design • Simulation of dispersion as a design tool • Address charge measurement with higher occupancy • Feb 07 target submission LECC 06 -- 0.13u pixel test chip -- M.Garcia-Sciveres
Backup Slides LECC 06 -- 0.13u pixel test chip -- M.Garcia-Sciveres
TRE vs. fluence for large t LECC 06 -- 0.13u pixel test chip -- M.Garcia-Sciveres
Weibull Function used Exponent (slope parameter) Saturation value of x-section LET (x-axis) Threshold value X-section (y-axis) Width paramater LECC 06 -- 0.13u pixel test chip -- M.Garcia-Sciveres
1->0 single latch LET results 10-7 10-8 10-9 Cross Section (cm2) 10-10 10-11 LECC 06 -- 0.13u pixel test chip -- M.Garcia-Sciveres
Bias mirror voltages • No change (after 2 week cool-down) 1.3V Vbias 100uA LECC 06 -- 0.13u pixel test chip -- M.Garcia-Sciveres