Cargando…
Electronics Design and Layout Complexity of the ATLAS New Small Wheels
The upgrades of the LHC accelerator and the experiments in 2019/20 and 2023/24 will allow to increase the luminosity to 2×1034 cm−2s−1 and 5×1034 cm−2s−1, respectively. For the ultimate HL-LHC phase the expected mean number of interactions per bunch crossing will increase from 55 at 2×1034 cm−2s−1 t...
Autor principal: | |
---|---|
Lenguaje: | eng |
Publicado: |
2016
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | http://cds.cern.ch/record/2196939 |
_version_ | 1780951132446654464 |
---|---|
author | Moschovakos, Paris |
author_facet | Moschovakos, Paris |
author_sort | Moschovakos, Paris |
collection | CERN |
description | The upgrades of the LHC accelerator and the experiments in 2019/20 and 2023/24 will allow to increase the luminosity to 2×1034 cm−2s−1 and 5×1034 cm−2s−1, respectively. For the ultimate HL-LHC phase the expected mean number of interactions per bunch crossing will increase from 55 at 2×1034 cm−2s−1 to ∼140 at 5×1034 cm−2s−1. This increase, drastically impacts the ATLAS trigger and trigger rates. For the ATLAS Muon Spectrometer, a replacement of the innermost endcap stations, the so called “Small Wheels” operating in a magnetic field, is therefore planned for 2019/20 to be able to maintain a low pT threshold for single muon and excellent tracking capability in the HL-LHC regime. The New Small Wheels will feature two new detector technologies, Resistive Micromegas and small strip Thin Gap Chambers conforming a system of ~2.4 million readout channels. Both detector technologies will provide trigger and tracking primitives fully compliant with the post-2024 HL-LHC operation. To allow for some safety margin, the design studies assume a maximum instantaneous luminosity of 7×1034 cm−2 s−1, 200 pile-up events, trigger rates of 1 MHz at Level-0 and 400 KHz at Level-1. A radiation dose of ~ 1700 Gy (inner radius) is expected. The electronics design of such a system will be implemented in some 8000 front-end boards including the design of 4 different custom front-end ASICs. Among them the 64 channels VMM, a common frontend ASIC for both detector technologies and charge-interpolating trackers, providing amplitude, timing measurements, per channel analog-to-digital conversions and in parallel direct trigger outputs. The candidate selection is designed within the budget latency of 1 us, and 6 us after 2024. Moreover, the design integrates the GBTx (Gigabit transceiver) ASIC and a Slow Control ASIC developed at CERN. The data flow is designed through a high-throughput network approach. The overall design will be presented. |
id | cern-2196939 |
institution | Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear |
language | eng |
publishDate | 2016 |
record_format | invenio |
spelling | cern-21969392019-09-30T06:29:59Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2196939engMoschovakos, ParisElectronics Design and Layout Complexity of the ATLAS New Small WheelsParticle Physics - ExperimentThe upgrades of the LHC accelerator and the experiments in 2019/20 and 2023/24 will allow to increase the luminosity to 2×1034 cm−2s−1 and 5×1034 cm−2s−1, respectively. For the ultimate HL-LHC phase the expected mean number of interactions per bunch crossing will increase from 55 at 2×1034 cm−2s−1 to ∼140 at 5×1034 cm−2s−1. This increase, drastically impacts the ATLAS trigger and trigger rates. For the ATLAS Muon Spectrometer, a replacement of the innermost endcap stations, the so called “Small Wheels” operating in a magnetic field, is therefore planned for 2019/20 to be able to maintain a low pT threshold for single muon and excellent tracking capability in the HL-LHC regime. The New Small Wheels will feature two new detector technologies, Resistive Micromegas and small strip Thin Gap Chambers conforming a system of ~2.4 million readout channels. Both detector technologies will provide trigger and tracking primitives fully compliant with the post-2024 HL-LHC operation. To allow for some safety margin, the design studies assume a maximum instantaneous luminosity of 7×1034 cm−2 s−1, 200 pile-up events, trigger rates of 1 MHz at Level-0 and 400 KHz at Level-1. A radiation dose of ~ 1700 Gy (inner radius) is expected. The electronics design of such a system will be implemented in some 8000 front-end boards including the design of 4 different custom front-end ASICs. Among them the 64 channels VMM, a common frontend ASIC for both detector technologies and charge-interpolating trackers, providing amplitude, timing measurements, per channel analog-to-digital conversions and in parallel direct trigger outputs. The candidate selection is designed within the budget latency of 1 us, and 6 us after 2024. Moreover, the design integrates the GBTx (Gigabit transceiver) ASIC and a Slow Control ASIC developed at CERN. The data flow is designed through a high-throughput network approach. The overall design will be presented. ATL-MUON-SLIDE-2016-378oai:cds.cern.ch:21969392016-07-06 |
spellingShingle | Particle Physics - Experiment Moschovakos, Paris Electronics Design and Layout Complexity of the ATLAS New Small Wheels |
title | Electronics Design and Layout Complexity of the ATLAS New Small Wheels |
title_full | Electronics Design and Layout Complexity of the ATLAS New Small Wheels |
title_fullStr | Electronics Design and Layout Complexity of the ATLAS New Small Wheels |
title_full_unstemmed | Electronics Design and Layout Complexity of the ATLAS New Small Wheels |
title_short | Electronics Design and Layout Complexity of the ATLAS New Small Wheels |
title_sort | electronics design and layout complexity of the atlas new small wheels |
topic | Particle Physics - Experiment |
url | http://cds.cern.ch/record/2196939 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT moschovakosparis electronicsdesignandlayoutcomplexityoftheatlasnewsmallwheels |