Optical links for the CMS Tracker at CERN - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Optical links for the CMS Tracker at CERN

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Optical links for the CMS Tracker at CERN J. Troska (on behalf of Karl Gill) CERN EP Division – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Optical links for the CMS Tracker at CERN


1
Optical links for the CMS Tracker at CERN
  • J. Troska (on behalf of Karl Gill)
  • CERN EP Division

2
Outline
  • 1. Introduction
  • Project
  • LHC/CMS/Tracker/Optical Links
  • Environment
  • 2 Radiation damage testing at CERN
  • Lasers
  • fibres/connectors
  • photodiodes
  • System considerations
  • 3 Summary
  • Copies of slides available http//gill.home.cern.
    ch/gill/talks.html

3
LHC at CERN
Large Hadron Collider
27 km circumference 7 TeV proton beams
CMS
CERN, Geneva
4
CMS at CERN/LHC

5
CMS Tracker development
Layers of silicon microstrip detectors
Barrel layer prototype
10 million detector channels
Forward disk prototype
6
CMS Tracker analogue optical link
  • Transmitter - 1310nm InGaAsP EEL
  • Fibres and connectors - Ge-doped SM fibre
  • Receivers - InGaAs 12-way p-i-n
  • plus analogue electronics - rad-hard deep
    sub-micron

7
Tracker radiation environment
high collision rate high energy large number of
tracks radiation damage lifetime gt10 years
temperature -10C
Charged hadron fluence (/cm2 over 10yrs)
8
CMS Tracker readout and control links
  • final system

Analogue Readout 50000 links _at_ 40MS/s
Parts under test for radiation damage
FED
Detector Hybrid
Tx Hybrid
96
Rx Hybrid
processing
MUX

A
buffering
APV
4
DAQ
21
D
amplifiers
12
12

C
pipelines
1281 MUX
PLL Delay
Timing
DCU
TTCRx


TTC
Digital Control 2000 links _at_40MHz
FEC
Control

64
4
TTCRx
CCU
CCU
8
processing
buffering
CCU
CCU
Back-End
Front-End
9
Environments
  • Optoelectronics already employed in variety of
    harsh radiation environments
  • e.g. civil nuclear and space applications

Total dose (Gy)
1E8
Space (p,e)
Nuclear (g, also n)
1E6
CMS TK
1E4
1E2
CMS cavern
1E0
1E-2
1E-2
1E0
1E2
1E4
1E6
Dose rate (Gy/hr)
10
COTS issues
  • Extensive use of commercial off-the-shelf
    components (COTS) in CMS optical links
  • Benefit from latest industrial developments
  • cheaper
  • reliable tested devices
  • However COTS not made for CMS environment
  • no guarantees of long-life inside CMS
  • validation testing of COTS mandatory before
    integration into CMS

11
COTS components for CMS Tracker links
  • Some examples

96-way cable
1-way InGaAsP edge-emitting lasers on
Si-submount with ceramic lid
12-way optical ribbon and MT-connector
single fibre and MU connector
12
Validation procedures for rad-resistance
  • E.g. lasers and photodiodes

Highlighted 1999 Market survey validation tests
(in-system) lab tests
g irradiation
p irradiation
n irradiation
annealing
ageing
(in-system) lab tests
  • Feedback test results into system specifications
  • radiation damage effects can then be mitigated

13
Neutron tests at UC Louvain-La-Neuve
deuterons
Recent validation tests of laser diodes 20MeV
neutrons flux 5x1010n/cm2/s fluence
5x1014n/cm2 (Similar to CMS Tracker 10 year
exposure)
neutrons
Samples stacked inside cold box (-10C)
neutrons
14
Radiation test system
  • Test setup for in-situ measurements
  • In-situ measurements give powerful capability to
    extrapolate damage effects to other radiation
    environments
  • e.g. CMS Tracker, if damage factors of different
    particles known
  • Similar test setup for p-i-n and fibre studies

15
neutron damage - Italtel/NEC lasers
Light output vs current characteristics before
and after neutron irradiation
Fluence 5x1014n/cm2 temperature 23C
Damage effects consistent with build-up
of non-radiative recombination centres
in/around active laser volume, causing a decrease
in injected charge carrier lifetimes
16
neutron damage - Italtel/NEC LD
Damage vs fluence and time
Roughly linear increase in damage with fluence
annealing vs time
Same annealing dynamics for threshold and
efficiency therefore indicate same underlying
physical damage mechanism
17
Different vendors compared
  • Ithr and Eff changes vs neutron fluence
  • similar effects in all 1310nm InGaAsP lasers

18
Radiation source comparison - Italtel/NEC laser
For comparison with other sources Normalize to
fluence 5x1014p/cm2 in 96 hours irradiation
Extend to 10 years, taking into account LHC
luminosity profile
Damage factor ratios 0.8MeV n 1 6MeV n
3.1 20MeV n 4.9 330MeV pi 11.5 24GeV p 9.4
possible to estimate damage to laser threshold in
CMS Tracker in worst case, at low radiiDIthr
14mA for Italtel/NEC lasers
19
Tests of fibre attenuation
  • Gamma damage (CMS-TK COTS single-mode fibres) at
    1310nm

20
Tests of photodiodes - leakage
  • leakage current (InGaAs, 6MeV neutrons)
  • similar damage over many (similar) devices

21
Photodiodes - response
  • Photocurrent (InGaAs, 6MeV neutrons)
  • Significant differences in damage
  • depends mainly if front or back-illuminated
  • front-illuminated better

22
Photodiode Single-event-upset
  • Bit-error-rate for 80Mbit/s transmission with
    59MeV protons in InGaAs p-i-n (D80mm)
  • 10-90 angle, 1-100mW optical power
  • flux 106/cm2/s (similar to that inside CMS
    Tracker)

beam
45
10
90
  • Ionization dominates for angles close to 90
  • nuclear recoil dominates for smaller angles
  • BER inside CMS Tracker similar to rate due to
    nuclear recoils
  • should operate at 100mW opt. power

23
System considerations
  • Build in radiation damage compensation into
    optical link system
  • Lasers
  • provide adjustable d.c. bias to track threshold
    increase
  • provide variable gain to compensate for
    efficiency loss (and other gain factors)
  • Fibres and connectors
  • No significant damage
  • Photodiodes
  • provide leakage current sink
  • provide adjustable gain
  • use sufficient optical power (100mW) to avoid
    significant SEU effects

24
Summary
  • CMS Tracker Optical links project
  • 50000 analogue 1000 digital links
  • harsh radiation environment, 10 years at -10C
  • COTS components
  • Extensive validation testing of radiation
    hardness necessary
  • ionization damage (total dose)
  • displacement damage (total fluence) and annealing
  • reliability
  • SEU
  • Accumulated knowledge of radiation damage effects
  • compensation built into optical link system
  • confidence of capacity to operate for 10 years
    inside CMS Tracker

http//cern.ch/cms-tk-opto/
25
CMS at CERN/LHC

26
Radiation environment in CMS
high collision rate high energy large number of
tracks radiation damage require lifetime gt10
years operating temperature -10C fluences up
to 2x1014cm-2 (dominated by charged pions) total
dose up to 150kGy

27
Experimental setup for particle-induced BER
Incident beam
28
Annealing (current)
  • damage anneals faster at higher forward bias
  • recombination enhanced annealing

29
Reliability
  • irradiated device lifetime gt 10 years??
  • Ageing test at 80C
  • No additional degradation in irradiated lasers
  • acc. Factor 400 relative to -10C operation
  • lifetime gtgt10years

30
Fibre attenuation vs fluence
  • Neutron damage (CMS TK)
  • damage actually most likely due to gamma
    background

31
Damage picture
  • Defects introduced into band-gap by displacement
    damage
  • non-radiative recombination at defects
  • competes with laser recombination

32
Fibre annealing
  • damage recovers after irradiation (e.g. gamma)
  • Damage therefore has dose-rate dependence

33
InGaAs p-i-n characteristics
  • Output current vs incident power
  • InGaAs p-i-n -5V
  • before/after 2x1014p/cm2
  • Increase in Ileak
  • decrease in Iphoto

34
Different particles (leakage)
  • leakage current (InGaAs, different particles, 20C)
  • higher energy p, p more damaging than n

35
Different particles (response)
  • different particles
  • higher energy p, p more damaging than n

36
InGaAs p-i-n annealing
  • After pion irradiation (room T, -5V)
  • Leakage anneals a little
  • No annealing of response

37
InGaAs p-i-n reliability
  • irradiated device lifetime gt 10 years??
  • Ageing test at 80C
  • No additional degradation in irradiated p-i-ns
  • lifetime gtgt10years

38
PD SEU
  • photodiodes sensitive to SEU
  • strong dependence upon particle type and angle

39
CMS/LHC at CERN

40
CMS pit excavations (to -80m)
41
CMS experimental cavern excavations
42
CMS experiment assembly at surface
43
LHC Radiation environments experiments
  • e.g CMS neutrons

(courtesy M. Huhtinen)
44
LHC Radiation environments experiments
  • e.g CMS photons

(courtesy M. Huhtinen)
45
LHC Radiation environments Trackers
  • (charged hadrons)

(courtesy M. Huhtinen)
46
LHC Radiation environments Trackers
  • (neutrons)

(courtesy M. Huhtinen)
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