Sara Marconi
CERN
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sara Marconi.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2014
Sara Marconi; Elia Conti; P. Placidi; J. Christiansen; Tomasz Hemperek
The foreseen Phase 2 pixel upgrades at the LHC have very challenging requirements for the design of hybrid pixel readout chips. A versatile pixel simulation platform is as an essential development tool for the design, verification and optimization of both the system architecture and the pixel chip building blocks (Intellectual Properties, IPs). This work is focused on the implemented simulation and verification environment named VEPIX53, built using the SystemVerilog language and the Universal Verification Methodology (UVM) class library in the framework of the RD53 Collaboration. The environment supports pixel chips at different levels of description: its reusable components feature the generation of different classes of parameterized input hits to the pixel matrix, monitoring of pixel chip inputs and outputs, conformity checks between predicted and actual outputs and collection of statistics on system performance. The environment has been tested performing a study of shared architectures of the trigger latency buffering section of pixel chips. A fully shared architecture and a distributed one have been described at behavioral level and simulated; the resulting memory occupancy statistics and hit loss rates have subsequently been compared.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2016
Elia Conti; Sara Marconi; J. Christiansen; P. Placidi; T. Hemperek
The simulation and verification framework developed by the RD53 collaboration is a powerful tool for global architecture optimization and design verification of next generation hybrid pixel readout chips. In this paper the framework is used for studying digital pixel chip architectures at behavioral level. This is carried out by simulating a dedicated, highly parameterized pixel chip description, which makes it possible to investigate different grouping strategies between pixels and different latency buffering and arbitration schemes. The pixel hit information used as simulation input can be either generated internally in the framework or imported from external Monte Carlo detector simulation data. The latter have been provided by both the CMS and ATLAS experiments, featuring HL-LHC operating conditions and the specifications related to the Phase 2 upgrade. Pixel regions and double columns were simulated using such Monte Carlo data as inputs: the performance of different latency buffering architectures was compared and the compliance of different link speeds with the expected column data rate was verified.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2014
Elia Conti; J. Christiansen; P. Placidi; Sara Marconi
The technical challenges related to increased collision rates of the LHC will significantly affect detector electronics design. Efficient hit processing is achieved in pixel detectors by grouping pixels in regions, which share buffering logic. We present an approach to determine an optimized sharing strategy between pixels, depending on the shape of clustered hits in the detector. Simple statistical models of such shapes have been developed with respect to the position in the detector. The buffering performance of different pixel region configurations has been compared, showing significant improvement from architectures that do not feature pixel grouping.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2017
Sara Marconi; S. Orfanelli; M. Karagounis; Tomasz Hemperek; J. Christiansen; P. Placidi
A dedicated power analysis methodology, based on modern digital design tools and integrated with the VEPIX53 simulation framework developed within RD53 collaboration, is being used to guide vital choices for the design and optimization of the next generation ATLAS and CMS pixel chips and their critical serial powering circuit (shunt-LDO). Power consumption is studied at different stages of the design flow under different operating conditions. Significant effort is put into extensive investigations of dynamic power variations in relation with the decoupling seen by the powering network. Shunt-LDO simulations are also reported to prove the reliability at the system level.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2017
A. Paternò; L. Pacher; E. Monteil; F. Loddo; N. Demaria; Luigi Gaioni; F. De Canio; Gianluca Traversi; V. Re; Lodovico Ratti; Angelo Rivetti; M. Da Rocha Rolo; G. Dellacasa; G. Mazza; C. Marzocca; F. Licciulli; F. Ciciriello; Sara Marconi; P. Placidi; G. Magazzù; Alberto Stabile; S. Mattiazzo; C. Veri
This paper describes a readout ASIC prototype designed by the CHIPIX65 project, part of RD53, for a pixel detector at HL-LHC . A 64×64 matrix of 50×50μm2 pixels is realised. A digital architecture has been developed, with particle efficiency above 99.5% at 3 GHz/cm2 pixel rate, trigger frequency of 1 MHz and 12.5μsec latency. Two analog front end designs, one synchronous and one asynchronous, are implemented. Charge is measured with 5-bit precision, analog dead-time below 1%. The chip integrates for the first time many of the components developed by the collaboration in the past, including the Digital-to-Analog converters, Bandgap reference, Serializer, sLVS drivers, and analog Front Ends. Irradiation tests on these components proved their reliability up to 600 Mrad.
Proceedings of Topical Workshop on Electronics for Particle Physics — PoS(TWEPP-17) | 2018
Luca Pacher; L. Ratti; F. Licciulli; G. Mazza; Andrea Paternò; Serena Panati; Luigi Gaioni; R. Wheadon; V. Re; G. Traversi; F. Ciciriello; C. Marzocca; S. Mattiazzo; Manuel Dionisio Da Rocha Rolo; Alberto Stabile; Guido Magazzu; Natale Demaria; F. Rotondo; E. Monteil; Sara Marconi; G. Dellacasa; P. Placidi; Francesco De Canio; F. Loddo; A. Rivetti
CHIPIX65-FE0 is a readout ASIC in CMOS 65nm designed by the CHIPIX65 project for a pixel detector at the HL-LHC, consisting of a matrix of 64x64 pixels of dimension 50x50 μm2. It is fully functional, can work at low thresholds down to 250e− and satisfies all the specifications. Results confirm low-noise, fast performance of both the synchronous and asynchronous front-end in a complex digital chip. CHIPIX65-FE0 has been irradiated up to 600 Mrad and is only marginally affected on analog performance. Further irradiation to 1 Grad will be performed. Bump bonding to silicon sensors is now on going and detailed measurements will be presented. The HL-LHC accelerator will constitute a new frontier for particle physics after year 2024. One major experimental challenge resides in the inner tracking detectors, measuring particle position: here the dimension of the sensitive area (pixel) has to be scaled down with respect to LHC detectors. This paper describes the results obtained by CHIPIX65-FE0, a readout ASIC in CMOS 65nm designed by the CHIPIX65 project as small-scale demonstrator for a pixel detector at the HL-LHC. It consists of a matrix of 64x64 pixels of dimension 50x50 um2 pixels and contains several pieces that are included in RD53A, a large scale ASIC designed by the RD53 Collaboration: two out of three front-ends (a synchronous and an asynchronous architecture); several building blocks; a (4x4) pixel region digital architecture with central local buffer storage, complying with a 3 GHz/cm2 hit rate and a 1 MHz trigger rate maintaining a very high efficiency (above 99%). The chip is 100% functional, either running in triggered or trigger-less mode. All building-blocks (DAC, ADC, Band Gap, SER, sLVS-TX/RX) and very front ends are working as expected. Analog performance shows a remarkably low ENC of 90e-, a fast-rise time below 25ns and low-power consumption (about 4μA/pixel) in both synchronous and asynchronous front-ends; a very linear behavior of CSA and discriminator. No significant cross talk from digital electronics has been measured, achieving a low threshold of 250e-. Signal digitization is obtained with a 5b-Time over Threshold technique and is shown to be fairly linear, working well either at 80 MHz or with higher frequencies of 300 MHz obtained with a tunable local oscillator. Irradiation results up to 600 Mrad at low temperature (-20°C) show that the chip is still fully functional and analog performance is only marginally degraded. Further irradiation will be performed up to 1 Grad either at low or room temperature, to further understand the level of radiation hardness of CHIPIX65-FE0. We are now in the process of bump bonding CHIPIX65-FE0 to 3D and possibly planar silicon sensors during spring. Detailed results will be presented in the conference paper.
International Conference on Applications in Electronics Pervading Industry, Environment and Society | 2016
Sara Marconi; Elia Conti; P. Placidi; A. Scorzoni; Jorgen Christiansen; Tomasz Hemperek
The adoption of a system-level simulation environment based on standard methodologies is a valuable solution to handle system complexity and achieve best design optimization. This work is focused on the implementation of such a platform for High Energy Physics (HEP) applications, i.e. for next generation pixel detector readout chips in the framework of the RD53 collaboration. The generic and re-usable environment is capable of verifying different designs in an automated fashion under a wide and flexible stimuli space; it can also be used at different stages of the design process, from initial architecture optimization to final design verification.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2018
Sara Marconi; Elia Conti; J. Christiansen; P. Placidi
Frontier Detector for Frontier Physics - 13th Pisa Meeting on Advanced Detectors | 2015
D. Passeri; P. Placidi; Sara Marconi