Back-end and interface implementation of the STS-XYTER2 prototype ASIC for the CBM experiment

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Published 17 November 2016 © 2016 IOP Publishing Ltd and Sissa Medialab srl
, , 18th International Workshop on Radiation Imaging Detectors (IWORID2016) Citation K. Kasinski et al 2016 JINST 11 C11018 DOI 10.1088/1748-0221/11/11/C11018

1748-0221/11/11/C11018

Abstract

Each front-end readout ASIC for the High-Energy Physics experiments requires robust and effective hit data streaming and control mechanism. A new STS-XYTER2 full-size prototype chip for the Silicon Tracking System and Muon Chamber detectors in the Compressed Baryonic Matter experiment at Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research (FAIR, Germany) is a 128-channel time and amplitude measuring solution for silicon microstrip and gas detectors. It operates at 250 kHit/s/channel hit rate, each hit producing 27 bits of information (5-bit amplitude, 14-bit timestamp, position and diagnostics data). The chip back-end implements fast front-end channel read-out, timestamp-wise hit sorting, and data streaming via a scalable interface implementing the dedicated protocol (STS-HCTSP) for chip control and hit transfer with data bandwidth from 9.7 MHit/s up to 47 MHit/s. It also includes multiple options for link diagnostics, failure detection, and throttling features. The back-end is designed to operate with the data acquisition architecture based on the CERN GBTx transceivers. This paper presents the details of the back-end and interface design and its implementation in the UMC 180 nm CMOS process.

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10.1088/1748-0221/11/11/C11018