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ICAL electronics and DAQ schemes - 1. B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai For INO Collaboration. Plan of the presentation. Glass RPC characteristics ICAL prototype detector Electronics and DAQ system for the prototype detector Preliminary results from the prototype detector ICAL detector
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ICAL electronics and DAQ schemes - 1 B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai For INO Collaboration
Plan of the presentation • Glass RPC characteristics • ICAL prototype detector • Electronics and DAQ system for the prototype detector • Preliminary results from the prototype detector • ICAL detector • Electronics and DAQ schemes for ICAL • Integration issues • Project implementation strategies B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
RPCs for prototype detector • Using 3mm thick Asahi Float glass procured from local market • Polycarbonate buttons, spacers and gas nozzles developed and fabricated • Resistive coat developed in collaboration with a local industry • Operated in avalanche mode using R134:Iso:SF6::95.5:4.3:0.2 gas mixture 1m 1m B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Honeycomb pickup panel Terminations on the non-readout end Machined pickup strips on honeycomb panel Preamp connections on the readout end B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Pulse profiles while measuring Z0 48 W Open 51 W 100 W 100 W B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
RPC pulse profile B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Decay constant = 10nS B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Charge-pulse height plot B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Charge spectrum of the RPC = 375fC B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Pulse height-pulse width plot B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Time spectrum of the RPC t = 1.7nS B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
ICAL prototype detector • 13 layers of 50 mm thick low carbon iron plates • 35 ton absorber mass, rectangular design • 1.5 Tesla uniform magnetic field • 12, 1m2 RPC layers • 768 readout channels • Trigger on cosmic ray muons • In situ, using RPCs • Using scintillation paddle layers • Record strip hit and timing information • Chamber and ambient parameter monitoring B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Scheme for prototype detector B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
RPC stack for INO prototype detector B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Schematic of the prototype detector B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Front-end inventory per layer • 2 planes (X & Y) • 64 readout channels • 8 preamplifier boards • 4 Analog Front Ends • 2 Digital Front Ends B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Preamplifiers • BARC designed HMCs inventory • First stage negative input(1595): 1500 pcs • First stage positive input(1597): 1500 pcs • Second stage(1513): 1400 pcs • 2 types of preamps for X and Y planes • Cascaded HMCs, Gain: 80, 8-in-1 • Rise time: 3nS, Noise band: ±7mV • Need about 100 boards per stack • Installation of ¾th of boards completed B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
16-channel analog front-end • Functions • To digitize the preamp signals • To form the pre-trigger (Level-0) logic • Signal shaping • Features • Based on the AD96687 ultra-fast comparator • Common adjustable threshold going up to 500mV • VTh now at -20mV • ECL output for low I/O delay and fast rise times B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
32-channel digital front-end • Functions • Latch RPC strip status on trigger • Transfer latched data serially through a daisy chain to the readout module • Time-multiplex strip signals for noise rate monitoring • Generate Level-1 trigger signals • Features • Latch, shift register, multiplexer are implemented in CPLD XC95288 • Trigger logic is built into a CPLD XC9536; flexible • Data transfer rates of up to 10MHz B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Control and data router • To route the control signals and shift clock from controller to the individual FEP modules • To route the latch data from all the FEPs to the readout module • To route strip signals from FEPs to the scalers for noise rate monitoring B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Trigger and TDC router • To route the m-Fold signals from each RPC plane to the final trigger module • To route TDC stop signals (1-Fold) from each plane to the TDC module • All signals are in LVDS logic, except TDC stop signals which are in ECL logic for achieving better timing resolution B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Data and monitor control module • On FTO, triggers all the FEPs to latch the strip signals • Initiates serial data transfer to the readout module • Manages the noise rate monitoring of strip signals, by generating periodic interrupts and selecting channels to be monitored sequentially • CAMAC interface for parameter configuration (like data transfer speed, size, monitoring period) as well as diagnostic procedures B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Data and monitor readout Module • Supports two serial connections for event data recording of X and Y planes and 8 channels for noise rate monitoring • Serial Data converted into 16-bit parallel data and stored temporarily in 4k FIFO buffer • Source of LAM for external trigger source • CAMAC interface for data readout to Computer B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Final trigger module • Receives m-fold layer triggers and generates m n fold final trigger • Final trigger out (FTO) invokes LAM and is Logic Trigger Out (LTO) vetoed by gated LAM • Inputs can be selectively masked • The rates of different m n combinations counted by embedded 16-bit scalers • Rate monitoring of LTO signal using the built in 24-bit scaler • Logic inputs and m n signals are latched on an FTO and can be read via CAMAC commands • Implementing using FPGA adds to circuit simplicity and flexibility Developed by ED, BARC B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Power supplies and monitoring • Essentially commercial solutions • Low voltage & monitoring • CAEN’s 1527 mainframe • EASY 3000 system • Multi-channel, adjustable voltage, high current modules • High voltage & monitoring • CAEN’s 2527 mainframe • RPC bias current monitoring • CAEN’s 128-channel ADC board in 2527 mainframe B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Low voltage current inventory • Preamps • ±6V 16.32A each plane • AFEs • +6V 28.8A for each plane • -6V 34.8A for each plane • DFEs • +8V 11.76A for each plane • -8V 6.36A for each plane B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
On-line monitoring & services • On-line event display • On-line web portal for monitoring chambers under test as well as ambient conditions of the laboratories • Chambers • High voltage and current • Strip noise rates • Cosmic muon efficiency • Ambient parameters • Temperature • Relative humidity • Barometric pressure • Magnet control and monitoring • Gas system control and monitoring • Web based electronic log book B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
BigStack: Data analysis software • ROOT based C code • Works on highly segmented configuration file • Handles event, monitor and trigger rate data • Interactively displays event tracks • Generates frame and strip hit files • Produces well designed summary sheets • Plots and histograms produced: • Efficiency profiles • Absolute and relative timing distributions • Strip cluster size calculations • Strip profiles and lego plots • Strip rate and calibration signal rate profiles and distributions • Paddle and pre-trigger rate profiles and distributions B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
A muon track in the BigStack B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Strip hit map of an RPC in a run B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Efficiency time profile of an RPC B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
RPC-wise timing parameters RPC Id HV(KV) Mean(nS) Sigma(nS) RelMean(nS) RelSigma(nS) AB06 09.8 49.53 2.06 -7.64 1.41 JB00 09.6 46.00 2.32 -4.47 1.67 IB01 09.8 42.31 2.15 -0.64 1.63 JB01 09.6 42.55 2.28 -0.87 1.58 JB03 09.8 43.75 2.26 -2.18 1.44 IB02 09.8 38.49 2.31 3.27 1.38 AB02 09.8 42.77 2.53 -1.21 1.51 AB01 09.8 35.30 2.16 6.33 1.71 AB03 09.8 45.82 3.23 -4.55 1.99 AB04 09.8 41.66 2.42 Reference RPC AB07 09.8 40.61 2.47 0.96 1.35 AB08 09.8 41.56 2.80 0.31 1.82 B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
RPC strip background rate monitor B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
We are here … • RPC’s pulse characteristics and ICAL’s requirements understood to a large extent; more will be known from the prototype detector • Formulating competitive schemes for electronics, data acquisition, trigger, control, monitor, on-line software, databases and other systems • Feasibility R&D studies on front-ends, timing elements, trigger architectures, on-line data handling schemes will be shortly taken up • Segmentation, power budgets, integration issues etc. must be addressed • Trade-offs between using available solutions and customised design and developments for ICAL to be debated • Procurement of design tools, infrastructure, fab facilities • Recruitment and placement of design engineers • National and international collaboration and team work B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
ICAL module B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Triggered scheme • Conventional architecture • Dedicated sub-system blocks for performing various data readout tasks • Need for Hardware based on-line trigger system • Trigger latency issues and how do we take care in implementation B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Trigger-less DAQ scheme Suitable for low event rate and low background/noise rates On-off control and Vth control to disable noisy channels B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Front-end specifications • No input matching circuit needed, HCP strips give ~50Ω characteristic impedance • Avalanche mode, pulse amplitude: 0.5-2mV • Gain (100-200, fixed) depends on the electronic noise obtainable • No gain needed if operated in streamer mode, option to by-pass gain stage • Rise time: < 1nS • Discriminator overhead: 3-4 preferable • Variable Vth for discriminator ±10mV to ±50mV • Pulse shaping (fixed) 50-100nS • Pulse shaping removes pulse height information; do w need the latter? B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Front-end considerations • RPC strip pitch versus front-end packaging • n-in-1 ASIC or PCB: Routing of tracks • 1-in-1 ASIC: Mounted on pickup panels • Low voltage distribution • DC-DC converters, one per RPC to generate high voltage supply • Output signal routing B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Sub-systems • Front-ends • Latch and timing units • Pipelines and fiber • Backend (VME) data collectors • Trigger system • Central clock • Slow control and monitoring • Gas, magnet, power supplies • Ambient parameters • Safety and interlocks • Computer, networking and security issues • On-line data quality monitors • Voice and video communications • Remote access protocols to detector sub-systems and data B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Important considerations • Information to record on trigger • Strip hit • Timing • Rates • Individual strip background rates ~100Hz • Event rate ~10Hz • On-line monitor • RPC parameters • Ambient parameters • Services, supplies B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Other critical issues • Power requirement and thermal management • 25mW/channel → 100KW/detector • Magnet power • Front-end positioning; use absorber to good use! • Do we need forced, water cooled ventilation? • Suggested cavern conditions • Temperature: 20±2oC • Relative humidity: 50±5% B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Placement of front-end electronics RPC signal pickup panel Front-end for X-plane RPC Gas volume Front-end for Y-plane B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Cables & services routing RPC Iron absorber Gas, LV & HV cables from RPCs RPC Signal cables from RPCs B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
DAQ & services’ sub-stations Iron absorber RPC Iron spacer DAQ HV Gas LV Iron absorber Gas B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Industries’ role • What should be INO’s modus operandi for involving industries? • Jobs like chip fabrication of course will be handled by industries (govt. or pvt.) • Can we out source some design jobs as well? • Board design and fabrication • Slow control and monitoring sub-systems • Industries are very eager and quite willing to! • Interacted with CAEN, NI, Datapatterns, ChipSculpt … B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008
Design team members • INO collaborating institutes must pledge design team members on full or serious basis • Need to train some of the younger members with expert institutions/members • Distributed tools and software so that engineers can work on defined segments of jobs at their home institutions • Particularly useful to begin with when new engineers will be working on well defined primitives B.Satyanarayana, TIFR, Mumbai ICAL Electronics September 17, 2008