Title: Serial Powering of Pixel Modules
1Serial Powering of Pixel Modules
- T. Stockmanns, P. Fischer, O. Runolfsson and N.
Wermes
2Why serial powering?
or
3Power consumption
- Every ATLAS - pixel module needs
- 2 supply voltages
Name Voltage Current Power
VDDA 1.7 V 970 1290 mA 1650 2200 mW
VDD 2 V 500 800 mA 1000 1320 mW
Sum ? 1.5 - 2 A
Total detector (1750 modules) 2 V 3500 A
6 power linesper module
- 1 HV bias connection
- 3 ground lines
4Cable
Total distance 152 m Maximum voltage
drop 6.5 V Optimum No cables at all
5Parallel Powering
- For a stave of 13 modules
- power sense lines 104
- supply voltage 2 V / 1,7 V
- supply current 26 A
- power consumption 47 W
- voltage drop 226 W
6Alternative Serial Powering
- For a stave of 13 modules
- power sense lines 2
- supply voltage 26 V
- supply current 2 A
- power consumption 52 W
- voltage drop 65 W
7Pros and Consof both concepts
Parallel Powering Serial Powering
Pros Cons
Individual control of each module Difficult to switch off a single module
No risk for the full chain Risk to loose a full chain
Possible noise crosstalk via power lines
Cons Pros
low voltage high current ? high voltage drop high voltage low current ? low voltage drop
high total power of pixel detector lower power consumption of pixel detector
one power supply per module one power supply per chain
large amount of cables less amount of cables
8Shunt regulators
- 10 shunt regulators built with commercial ICs
- All of them operated in series
- 2 modified to work with the required voltage
- water cooled
9Parallel readout of 2 serially powered modules
10Results of the two modules
Serial powered
Module 1
Module 2
Threshold 4700 e- Dispersion 480 e- Noise
250 e- working pixels 20800
Threshold 4680 e- Dispersion 460 e- Noise
150 e- working pixels 14400
11No influence on module performance
Serial powered
Parallel powered
Threshold 4700 e- Dispersion 480 e- Noise
150e- / 250 e-
Threshold 4330 e- Dispersion 300 e- Noise
148 e-
12Shunt Regulator
- slope of shunt regulators depends on threshold
and current variation - higher slope ? better stability
- but higher slope ? more load on lowest regulator
13Shunt Regulator
- slope of shunt regulators depends on threshold
and current variation - higher slope ? better stability
- but higher slope ? more load on lowest regulator
14Integration of regulators in newest FE-chip
shunt regulator and linear regulator implemented
and tested in the newest radhard version of the
FE-chip
15Threshold measurement
4 FE-I chips in parallel
1 2 chips in series
Threshold 4680 e- Dispersion 100 e- Noise
264 e-
Threshold 4780 e- Dispersion 105 e- Noise
268 e-
16Serial PoweringSensorless Module
- 13 working chips
- 37120 working pixels
typ. Threshold 4800 e- Dispersion 1340
e- 1200 e- (untuned!) Noise 214 e- 160 e-
17Summary
- Serial Powering of pixel detectors seems to be
possible - Feasibility of serial powering proven with
external regulators - Regulators implemented into the new radiation
hard FE-chips - Internal regulators tested on single chips and
modules - electrical performance very similar ? hope that
the differences in noise disappear with new
version of regulators -
- Next steps
- Using several modules in a series
- Measuring the performance of the modules
depending on different situations - Testing possible failure scenarios
18On Module Serial Powering
- On each side of a module the FE-chips are
connected in series ? Current consumption goes
down by a factor of 8 with an 8-times higher
voltage - Opposite FE-chips are on the same DC-potential
19On Module Serial Powering
- Implementation
- AC-coupling between FE-chips and MCC necessary
- Special sensor design necessary
- Disadvantage
- More complicated module design
- Advantages
- low current consumption
- no risk of loosing a chain of modules
- individual module operation like in parallel
powering