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Ivan Peric, Christian Kreidl, Peter Fischer University of Heidelberg

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Presentation on theme: "Ivan Peric, Christian Kreidl, Peter Fischer University of Heidelberg"— Presentation transcript:

1 Hybrid pixel detectors based on capacitive chip to chip signal transmission
Ivan Peric, Christian Kreidl, Peter Fischer University of Heidelberg ZITI – Institute for computer science Chair: LS SUS

2 Motivations … to avoid complex interconnection techniques and make the hybrid detectors as simple as possible achieve small pixel sizes – for instance 25X25 µm2 design low-cost and large scale-modules

3 Standard (DC coupled) hybrid pixel detector
RO Chip CSA CSA Bump Sensor Chip Sensor diodes – passive detector

4 Capacitive coupled hybrid pixel detector (CCPD)
CSA RO Electrode Cc Sens. Electr. Bias resistance – punch through structure, FOXFET Sensor diodes – passive detector

5 Capacitive coupled hybrid pixel detector (CCPD) with passive sensor
Sensor material is ionized Charge is separated and stored on Cd …which leads to a voltage drop on the sensor electrode A small charge amount is pumped by Cc into RO CSA which amplifies the signal Technical difficulties: 1) Small signal transferred to SCA - QsensCc/(Cd+Cc) 2) Need for bias resistance on the sensor pixel Back plane capacitance of receiver plate leads to decreased S/N Technical difficulties can be most probably solved

6 Capacitive coupled hybrid pixel detector (CCPD) with active sensor
RO Chip Receiver CS amplifier Sensor CS amplifier Active Pixel Sensor Sensor diodes – n-wells

7 Capacitive coupled hybrid pixel detector (CCPD) with active sensor
sensor material is ionized and electrons collected by n-well CSA amplifies the signal and generates a large voltage signal on the sensor electrode which then injects a large amount of charge through Cc into ROC Capacitive transferred charge is amplified by RO CSA Possible technology options for the active pixel sensor: 1) CMOS with epi layer – MAPS 2) DEPFET 3) New – high voltage CMOS (possibility to use CMOS pixel electronics, potentially higher radiation tolerance than by standard MAPS, charge collection close to the chip surface – thinning, long term availability of the technologies)

8 Active sensor in high voltage CMOS – signal generation
Feedback Sensor electrode PMOS NMOS P-well 50 V Bias Cin Cf Cin Deep N-well Cf P-depleted Sensor electrode -50 V ~10 μm CMOS amplifier 0 V P-undepleted Pixel electronics - 3.3 V Potential energy (Electrons)/e

9 Active sensor in high voltage CMOS – signal collection
Feedback Sensor electrode PMOS NMOS P-well 50 V Bias Cin Cf Cin Deep N-well Cf P-depleted Sensor electrode -50 V ~10 μm CMOS amplifier 0 V P-undepleted Pixel electronics - 3.3 V Potential energy (Electrons)/e

10 Active sensor in high voltage CMOS – signal amplification
Sensor electrode Feedback PMOS NMOS P-well 50 V Bias Cin Cf Cin Deep N-well Cf P-depleted Sensor electrode -50 V ~10 μm CMOS amplifier 0 V P-undepleted Pixel electronics - 3.3 V Potential energy (Electrons)/e

11 Active sensor in high voltage CMOS – end of amplification
Sensor electrode Feedback PMOS NMOS P-well 50 V Bias Cin Cf Cin Deep N-well Cf P-depleted Sensor electrode -50 V ~10 μm CMOS amplifier 0 V P-undepleted Pixel electronics - 3.3 V Potential energy (Electrons)/e

12 Active sensor in high voltage CMOS – return to baseline
Feedback Sensor electrode PMOS NMOS P-well 50 V Bias Cin Cf Cin Deep N-well Cf P-depleted Sensor electrode -50 V ~10 μm CMOS amplifier 0 V P-undepleted Pixel electronics - 3.3 V Potential energy (Electrons)/e

13 CCPD1

14 CCPD1 properties Readout- and sensor-chip aligned by flip-chip placer
and glued onto each other The chips are contacted by wire bonds AMS 0.35 µm high-voltage CMOS technology used for both chips Radiation-tolerant layout Use of current mode logic

15 CCPD1 wire bonds Sensor pixels Chip A chips Signal transmission Chip B
Readout pixels Sensor pixels Sensor electrode E-field Readout electrode Readout pixels

16 Trigger-based readout
Cfb Rfb Readout electrode Valid hit DEn DFF Bus driver Trigger B D Q Sensor chip 1 A 2 C CmpOut FF2 Data-bus Cc Timer DFF Thr Hit Reset Noise hit is not accepted V3 A – receiver CSA C – comparator - Timer generates Hit some defined time after the threshold crossing moment - Only “in time signals” flagged as hits Thr CmpOut Delay Hit Trigger Hit time window

17 Experimental results - sensor

18 MIP Spectra Monolithic pixel detector in high voltage CMOS - HVPix1
Full signals: 2000 e Split signals: 1100 e Monolithic pixel detector in high voltage CMOS - HVPix1 - Binary readout scheme with in-pixel comparators and threshold tuning - Pixel size 55X55 µm2 - Small matrix - Spectra measured by ToT Monolithic pixel detector in high voltage CMOS - HVPixM - analog readout scheme with simple 5T pixel electronics - Pixel size 19X19 µm2 - 128X128 matrix In chip ADCs Pixels with signal and their neighbors have been readout and amplitudes summed Number of hits noise spectrum 1800 e MIP spectrum ADC counts

19 Experimental results – CCPD1

20 Test pulse detection efficiency and threshold dispersion
Response probability of all pixels in the matrix to test pulses that generate 890 e in the sensor Threshold dispersion The same threshold settings lead to 0 noise signals when 100 triggers are issued Response probability Number of pixels 890 e Sigma 46 e Mean: 753 e 0 e Pixel number Input referred threshold/e

21 CCPD1 module connector RO chip Sensor PCB Wire bonds Wire bonds

22 CCPD1 module Drawbacks:
connector RO chip Sensor PCB Drawbacks: - Large readout chips needed – high costs, yield problems - Gap pixels need special connections - Mechanical complexity – two side wire bonding

23 CCPD2

24 Sensor concept Pixel sensor
Power and signals for ROC routed on the sensor Sensor electrodes grouped in the active ROC areas by fan-in ROCs placed by flip-chip Space covered by ROCs Bumps S -

25 Sensor concept S - S - RO chip S - S - Sensor Sensor Bump Cc

26 Module concept Hybrid ROC sensor

27 Sensor concept - properties
Large sensors covered with small readout chips Uniform pixels Unequal size of sensor and readout cells “pixels” Drawback – decreased Cc due to the space occupied by bumps Digital lines to sensor crosstalk can be eliminated by gigabit-rate digital communication provided the pixel amplifiers have smaller bandwidth

28 Chip layouts Readout chip – 30X30 matrix 40X40 µm2 pixels
0.18 µm UMC RF CMOS Sensor chip: active sensor pixels – 30X30 matrix 50X50 µm2 pixels 0.35 µm AMS high voltage CMOS

29 Experimental results – CCPD2

30 Cc measurement Cfs ? Cfr = 3fF ? ?! Cinj Cc CCPD2 CCPD1 signal measure
Vout [mV] Vout [mV] Simulated gain of the receiver ~ 1f/Cfr ~ 0.3 Measured gain of the sensor ~ Cinj/Cfs ~ 0.94 Vin [mV] Vin [mV] Vout [mV] Measured gain of the whole detector ~ Cc X 0.3 X 0.94 = 0.33 CCPD2 CCPD1 Cc ~ 1.18 fF Compare with Cc ~ 10fF Distance ~ 20 µm Distance ~ 8 µm εr = 3 Vin [mV]

31 Noise and spectral measurement
Number of signals Noise: 83 e Threshold: 321 e Input signal [e] Response probability Co-60 β-spectrum Preliminary ToT/20ns

32 Conclusion Two capacitive coupled hybrid pixel detector has been presented The detectors use active pixel sensors in high voltage CMOS technology The chips of CCPD1 are wire-bonded to PCBs Readout chips of CCPD2 are connected to power/digital signal lines that are placed on the sensor chip by a few bump-bonds Simple gold-bond bumping technology available in our lab has been used on die level Sensor generates mean MIP signal of approximately 1800 e Noise measured for both prototypes is ~ 80 e Threshold dispersion (CCPD1) is ~ 50 e CCPD2 concept allows implementation of low-cost large-area modules As example, the production cost of the CCPD2 prototype is “only” 4800 €

33 Many novel detector concepts are possible with CCPDs

34 DEPFET as CCPD ROC DEPFET sensor connector

35 CCPD with ultra thin sensor in high-voltage CMOS
ROC 18 µm sensor 2cm 1cm

36 CCPD with ultra thin sensor in high voltage CMOS
1mm ROC 0.5mm 25 µm


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