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HEP 2006, Ioannina Upgrading the CMS Tracker Readout Optical Links for Super LHC

HEP 2006, Ioannina Upgrading the CMS Tracker Readout Optical Links for Super LHC. Stefanos Dris Imperial College London CERN PH-MIC-OE. Objectives & Motivation.

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HEP 2006, Ioannina Upgrading the CMS Tracker Readout Optical Links for Super LHC

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  1. HEP 2006, IoanninaUpgrading the CMS Tracker Readout Optical Links for Super LHC Stefanos Dris Imperial College London CERN PH-MIC-OE

  2. Objectives & Motivation • The development of a fast digital readout link for Super LHC (SLHC), based on the current CMS Tracker readout optical link components. • First proposed in [S. Dris et. al., LECC2005, Heidelberg]. • Why? The cost of the optoelectronic components represents a large fraction of the CMS Tracker electronics budget. A digital system based on the existing components that can deliver sufficient performance for SLHC operation could potentially be a cost-effective solution. • How? The example of DSL: Advanced RF digital modulation is used to transfer data at 2-8Mbit/s over copper telephone lines (3-dB bandwidth of <30kHz). • What is the data rate that we can achieve with bandwidth-efficient digital modulation over the current CMS Tracker optical link? Introduction RF Modulation OFDM QAM Tests Future Work Conclusion

  3. The Current CMS Tracker Optical Links Introduction Analog Pulse Amplitude Modulation (PAM) Equivalent digital resolution = 8bits Sample rate = 40MSamples/s Equivalent digital data rate = 320Mbit/s RF Modulation OFDM QAM Tests Future Work Conclusion

  4. Digital Communications • The Shannon Capacity Shannon determined that the capacity, C, of a noisy communication channel of bandwidth, B, is given by: C=B*log2(1+SNR) [bits/s] Introduction RF Modulation OFDM QAM Tests Future Work Conclusion

  5. Digital Communications • RF Digital Modulation We will use a passband modulation scheme, i.e. one that uses a sinusoidal carrier, on top of which the data bits are modulated. This allows for greater bandwidth efficiency (since we can send symbols corresponding to multiple bits each). Introduction RF Modulation OFDM QAM Tests Future Work Conclusion

  6. Quadrature Amplitude Modulation Introduction Q=+3V Q*Sin(2πfct) 11 RF Modulation Looks like Euler’s formula! ejω=cos(ω)+j sin(ω) Sin(2πfct) OFDM 1101 QAM Tests I*Cos(2πfct) + Q*Sin(2πfct) Cos(2πfct) Future Work In-Phase Component Quadrature Component 01 Conclusion I=-1V I*Cos(2πfct)

  7. Quadrature Amplitude Modulation Introduction Q=+3V Q*Sin(2πfct) 11 RF Modulation Looks like Euler’s formula! ejω=cos(ω)+j sin(ω) Sin(2πfct) OFDM 1101 QAM Tests I*Cos(2πfct) + Q*Sin(2πfct) Cos(2πfct) Future Work In-Phase Component Quadrature Component 01 Conclusion I=-1V I*Cos(2πfct) • We can represent QAM symbols in the complex plane since they each have a unique amplitude and a phase. • It is used like an eye diagram in binary systems (when successive symbols are plotted).

  8. Quadrature Amplitude Modulation • Example: • 16-QAM received constellation diagram. • 1000 symbols plotted. Introduction RF Modulation OFDM QAM Tests Future Work Conclusion

  9. Quadrature Amplitude Modulation • Example: 32-QAM • log2(32)=5 bits/symbol • The symbol rate determines the total data rate, as well as the total channel bandwidth required. Of course, the higher the modulation order (i.e. more bits/symbol), the higher the bit error rate (BER). Introduction RF Modulation OFDM QAM Tests Future Work Conclusion

  10. Multi-Carrier Systems • A page out of the ADSL book: Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) • Given the available bandwidth of our channel, we can: • Use a single QAM carrier with a high symbol rate occupying the entire frequency range. • We can split the channel into smaller slices. Each slice can have a low symbol rate QAM carrier. • In systems such as ADSL and Wi-Fi, multiple carriers are used. Introduction RF Modulation OFDM QAM Tests Future Work Conclusion

  11. Multi-Carrier Systems • A page out of the ADSL book: Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) • Given the available bandwidth of our channel, we can: • Use a single QAM carrier with a high symbol rate occupying the entire frequency range. • We can split the channel into smaller slices. Each slice can have a low symbol rate QAM carrier. • In systems such as ADSL and Wi-Fi, multiple carriers are used. Introduction RF Modulation OFDM QAM Tests Future Work Conclusion

  12. Multi-Carrier Systems • A page out of the ADSL book: Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM) • Given the available bandwidth of our channel, we can: • Use a single QAM carrier with a high symbol rate occupying the entire frequency range. • We can split the channel into smaller slices. Each slice has a low symbol rate QAM carrier. The total data rate is the same. • In systems such as ADSL and Wi-Fi, multiple carriers are used. Introduction RF Modulation OFDM QAM Tests Future Work Conclusion

  13. Determining the Capacity • In January 2006 I carried out experiments to determine the capacity of out optical links, using bandwidth efficient digital modulation. • The idea is to emulate a multi-carrier system by passing a single (low symbol rate) carrier each time. • The center frequency of the carrier was varied from ~20MHz to over 1GHz. The number of bits/symbol across the entire channel spectrum was determined. • Hence it was possible to extrapolate and determine the total data rate that can be achieved with a QAM-OFDM system. Calculation method in [S. Dris et. al., LECC2005, Heidelberg]. Introduction RF Modulation OFDM QAM Tests Future Work Conclusion

  14. Test Setup Introduction RF Modulation OFDM QAM Tests • Modulator: • Agilent E4438C Vector Signal Generator. • Capable of QAM signal generation at symbol rates up to 50MSymbols/s, and 256-QAM (8bits/symbol). Maximum data rate = 50M*8 = 400 Mbits/s. • Generates random data patterns internally. • Demodulator: • Agilent E4440A Spectrum Analyzer. • Capable of QAM demodulation (up to 256-QAM), with 10MHz analysis bandwidth. • Both instruments are made for telecom applications, and can work with carrier frequencies up to 27GHz. Future Work Conclusion

  15. Test Setup Introduction RF Modulation OFDM QAM Tests Future Work Conclusion

  16. Test Setup Introduction RF Modulation OFDM QAM Tests Future Work Conclusion

  17. Example Data Introduction RF Modulation OFDM QAM Tests Future Work Conclusion • 32-QAM (5bits/symbol), Carrier Frequency=320MHz, Symbol Rate=1MS/s, Power=-30dBm • From the received constellation above, we can estimate the SNR.

  18. Results Introduction RF Modulation OFDM QAM Tests Future Work Conclusion • Signal to Noise Ratio as a function of carrier frequency • The SNR across the entire frequency range of the channel was determined experimentally, for various input signal transmission powers. • Using Shannon’s capacity equation, we can calculate the number of bits/symbol that can be assigned to this QAM carrier (given a target BER): • C=log2(1+SNR) [bits/symbol]

  19. Results Introduction RF Modulation OFDM QAM Tests Future Work Conclusion • Achievable data rate for various target BERs • The total data rate achievable using QAM-OFDM also depends on the transmission power used. This is implementation specific, and hence the data rate is plotted against transmission power above. The (most likely) achievable data rate is estimated at 4-4.5 Gbits/s.

  20. What Will Be • The next step in this project is to explore the feasibility of this upgrade in terms of implementation complexity, cost, and R&D effort. • At CERN, we are also looking at a completely new digital optical link, based on Commercial Off The Shelf (COTS) components (See [J. Troska, et. al., LECC 2005, Heidelberg]). • A prototype modulator/demodulator based on programmable devices, as well as analog components for carrier generation/detection, will be built. • Regardless of the upgrade path chosen, we will soon be looking at techniques derived from advanced communication theory in order to maximize the data rate of the new links. E.g. Forward Error Correcting (FEC) codes, source compression prior to data transmission, ‘smart’ digitization, etc. Introduction RF Modulation OFDM QAM Tests Future Work Conclusion

  21. Conclusion • We have shown that data rates in the Gbit/s range are possible over the CMS Tracker analog readout optical links, using an advanced digital modulation scheme. • Detailed results from the recent tests performed at CERN will be presented at LECC 2006 (Valencia, Spain). • We have taken the first step in understanding advanced communication theory and applying it in the HEP environment. Future fiber-based readout links will undoubtedly benefit from this knowledge. • More R&D and collaboration with industry and engineering departments will be necessary if we are to use such novel concepts in future readout systems. Introduction RF Modulation OFDM QAM Tests Future Work Conclusion

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