A CMOS 0.18 mu m 600 MHz clock multiplier PLL and a pseudo-LVDS driver for the high speed data transmission for the ALICE Inner Tracking System front-end chipopen access
- Authors
- Lattuca, A.; Mazza, G.; Rinella, G. Aglieri; Cavicchioli, C.; Chanlek, N.; Collu, A.; Degerli, Y.; Dorokhov, A.; Flouzat, C.; Gajanana, D.; Gao, C.; Guilloux, F.; Hillemanns, H.; Hristozkov, S.; Junique, A.; Keil, M.; Kim, D.; Kofarago, M.; Kugathasan, T.; Kwon, Y.; Mager, M.; Sielewicz, K. Marek; Tobon, C. Augusto Marin; Marras, D.; Martinengo, P.; Mugnier, H.; Musa, L.; Hung Pham, T.; Puggioni, C.; Reidt, F.; Riedler, P.; Rousset, J.; Siddhanta, S.; Snoeys, W.; Song, M.; Usai, G.; Van Hoorne, J. Willem; Yang, P.
- Issue Date
- Jan-2016
- Publisher
- IOP PUBLISHING LTD
- Keywords
- Electronic detector readout concepts (solid-state); Particle tracking detectors (Solid-state detectors)
- Citation
- JOURNAL OF INSTRUMENTATION, v.11, no.1
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- JOURNAL OF INSTRUMENTATION
- Volume
- 11
- Number
- 1
- URI
- https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/25170
- DOI
- 10.1088/1748-0221/11/01/C01066
- ISSN
- 1748-0221
- Abstract
- This work presents the 600 MHz clock multiplier PLL and the pseudo-LVDS driver which are two essential components of the Data Transmission Unit (DTU), a fast serial link for the 1.2 Gb/s data transmission of the ALICE inner detector front-end chip (ALPIDE). The PLL multiplies the 40 MHz input clock in order to obtain the 600 MHz and the 200 MHz clock for a fast serializer which works in Double Data Rate mode. The outputs of the serializer feed the pseudo-LVDS driver inputs which transmits the data from the pixel chip to the patch panel with a limited number of signal lines. The driver drives a 5.3 m-6.5 m long differential transmission line by steering a maximum of 5 mA of current at the target speed. To overcome bandwidth limitations coming from the long cables the pre-emphasis can be applied to the output. Currents for the main and pre-emphasis driver can individually be adjusted using on-chip digital-to-analog converters. The circuits will be integrated in the pixel chip and are designed in the same 0.18 mu m CMOS technology and will operate from the same 1.8 V supply. Design and test results of both circuits are presented.
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Collections - College of Advanced Convergence Engineering > Division of System Semiconductor > 1. Journal Articles

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