278 research outputs found
Active inductor shunt peaking in high-speed VCSEL driver design
An all transistor active inductor shunt peaking structure has been used in a
prototype of 8-Gbps high-speed VCSEL driver which is designed for the optical
link in ATLAS liquid Argon calorimeter upgrade. The VCSEL driver is fabricated
in a commercial 0.25-um Silicon-on-Sapphire (SoS) CMOS process for radiation
tolerant purpose. The all transistor active inductor shunt peaking is used to
overcome the bandwidth limitation from the CMOS process. The peaking structure
has the same peaking effect as the passive one, but takes a small area, does
not need linear resistors and can overcome the process variation by adjust the
peaking strength via an external control. The design has been tapped out, and
the prototype has been proofed by the preliminary electrical test results and
bit error ratio test results. The driver achieves 8-Gbps data rate as simulated
with the peaking. We present the all transistor active inductor shunt peaking
structure, simulation and test results in this paper.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures and 1 table, Submitted to 'Chinese Physics C
Development of A 16:1 serializer for data transmission at 5 Gbps
Radiation tolerant, high speed and low power serializer ASIC is critical for optical link systems in particle physics experiments. Based on a commercial 0.25 ÎĽm silicon-onsapphire CMOS technology, we design a 16:1 serializer with 5 Gbps serial data rate. This ASIC has been submitted for fabrication. The post-layout simulation indicates the deterministic jitter is 54 ps (pk-pk) and random jitter is 3 ps (rms). The power consumption of the serializer is 500 mW. The design details and post layout simulation results are presented in this paper
High-Speed Serial Optical Link Test Bench Using FPGA with Embedded Transceivers
We develop a custom Bit Error Rate test bench based on Altera’s Stratix II GX transceiver signal integrity development kit, demonstrate it on point-to-point serial optical link with data rate up to 5 Gbps, and compare it with commercial stand alone tester. The 8B/10B protocol is implemented and its effects studied. A variable optical attenuator is inserted in the fibre loop to induce transmission degradation and to measure receiver sensitivity. We report comparable receiver sensitivity results using the FPGA based tester and commercial tester. The results of the FPGA also shows that there are more one-tozero bit flips than zero-to-one bit flips at lower error rate. In 8B/10B coded transmission, there are more word errors than bit flips, and the total error rate is less than two times that of non-coded transmission. Total error rate measured complies with simulation results, according to the protocol setup
The Design of a High Speed Low Power Phase Locked Loop
The upgrade of the ATLAS Liquid Argon Calorimeter readout system calls for the development of radiation tolerant, high speed and low power serializer ASIC. We have designed a phase locked loop using a commercial 0.25-μm Silicon-on- Sapphire (SoS) CMOS technology. Post-layout simulation indicates that tuning range is 3.79 – 5.01 GHz and power consumption is 104 mW. The PLL has been submitted for fabrication. The design and simulation results are presented
Design and hardware evaluation of the optical-link system for the ATLAS Liquid Argon Calorimeter Phase-II Upgrade
An optical link system is being developed for the ATLAS Liquid Argon
Calorimeter Phase-II upgrade. The optical link system is responsible for
transmit the data of over 182 thousand detector channels from 1524 Front-End
Boards (FEBs) through 26 optical fibers per FEB over 150 meters to the counting
room and brings clocks, bunch crossing reset signals and slow
control/monitoring signals back to the FEBs. The optical link system is based
on the Low-Power GigaBit Transceivers (lpGBTs) and the Versatile optical
Transceiver (VTRx+) modules, which both are being developed for the
High-Luminosity LHC upgrade. An evaluation board is designed and the major
functions of the optical link system are being evaluated. The design of the
optical link system and the evaluation of major functions are presented in the
paper.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
1.28 and 5.12 Gbps multi-channel twinax cable receiver ASICs for the ATLAS Inner Tracker Pixel Detector Upgrade
We present two prototypes of a gigabit transceiver ASIC, GBCR1 and GBCR2,
both designed in a 65-nm CMOS technology for the ATLAS Inner Tracker Pixel
Detector readout upgrade.
The first prototype, GBCR1, has four upstream receiver channels and one
downstream transmitter channel with pre-emphasis. Each upstream channel
receives the data at 5.12 Gbps through a 5 meter AWG34 Twinax cable from an
ASIC driver located on the pixel module and restores the signal from the high
frequency loss due to the low mass cable. The signal is retimed by a recovered
clock before it is sent to the optical transmitter VTRx+. The downstream driver
is designed to transmit the 2.56 Gbps signal from lpGBT to the electronics on
the pixel module over the same cable. The peak-peak jitter (throughout the
paper jitter is always peak-peak unless specified) of the restored signal is
35.4 ps at the output of GBCR1, and 138 ps for the downstream channel at the
cable ends. GBCR1 consumes 318 mW and is tested.
The second prototype, GBCR2, has seven upstream channels and two downstream
channels. Each upstream channel works at 1.28 Gbps to recover the data directly
from the RD53B ASIC through a 1 meter custom FLEX cable followed by a 6 meter
AWG34 Twinax cable. The equalized signal of each upstream channel is retimed by
an input 1.28 GHz phase programmable clock. Compared with the signal at the
FLEX input, the additional jitter of the equalized signal is about 80 ps when
the retiming logic is o . When the retiming logic is on, the jitter is 50 ps at
GBCR2 output, assuming the 1.28 GHz retiming clock is from lpGBT. The
downstream is designed to transmit the 160 Mbps signal from lpGBT through the
same cable connection to RD53B and the jitter is about 157 ps at the cable
ends. GBCR2 consumes about 150 mW when the retiming logic is on. This design
was submitted in November 2019.Comment: 7 pages, 15 figure
MUX64, an analogue 64-to-1 multiplexer ASIC for the ATLAS High Granularity Timing Detector
We present the design and the performance of MUX64, a 64-to-1 analogue
multiplexer ASIC for the ATLAS High Granularity Timing Detector (HGTD). The
MUX64 transmits one of its 64 inputs selected by six address lines for the
voltages or temperatures being monitored to an lpGBT ADC channel. The prototype
ASICs fabricated in TSMC 130 nm CMOS technology were prepared in wire-bonding
and QFN88 packaging format. A total of 280 chips was examined for functionality
and quality assurance. The accelerated aging test conducted at 85 degrees
celsius shows negligible degradation over 16 days
Two low-power optical data transmission ASICs for the ATLAS Liquid Argon Calorimeter readout upgrade
A serializer ASIC and a VCSEL driver ASIC are needed for the front-end
optical data transmission in the ATLAS liquid argon calorimeter readout phase-I
upgrade. The baseline ASICs are the serializer LOCx2 and the VCSEL driver
LOCld, designed in a 0.25-{\mu}m Silicon-on-Sapphire (SoS) CMOS technology and
consumed 843 mW and 320 mW, respectively. Based on a 130-nm CMOS technology, we
design two pin-to-pin-compatible backup ASICs, LOCx2-130 and LOCld-130. Their
power consumptions are much lower then of their counterparts, whereas other
performance, such as the latency, data rate, and radiation tolerance, meet the
phase-I upgrade requirements. We present the design of LOCx2-130 and LOCld-130.
The test results of LOCx2-130 are also presented.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figure
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