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CMOS Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors

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CMOS Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors. R. Turchetta CMOS Sensor Design Group Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, Oxfordshire, UK. Outline. CMOS Image Sensors @ RAL The INMAPS process and its silicon proof Conclusions. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Monolithic and Vertically Integrated Pixel Detectors, CERN, 25 th November 2008 CMOS Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors R. Turchetta CMOS Sensor Design Group Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, Oxfordshire, UK
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Page 1: CMOS Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors

Monolithic and Vertically Integrated Pixel Detectors,CERN, 25th November 2008

CMOS Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors

R. TurchettaCMOS Sensor Design Group

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, Oxfordshire, UK

Page 2: CMOS Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors

2

CMOS Image Sensors @ RAL

The INMAPS process and its

silicon proof

Conclusions

Outline

Page 3: CMOS Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors

Overall view

CMOS image sensor activity started in 1998 (aka Monolithic Active Pixel Sensor; MAPS)

1st tape-out in 2000: test structures for the Star-Tracker in 0.5 and 0.7 m

1st full-scale sensor submitted in May 2001: the Star-Tracker in 0.5 m

Use of technologies down to 0.18 m

Use of CIS (CMOS Image Sensors) technologies

Patented, silicon-proofed INMAPS technologyfor high-end sensors

Pixel size from 2 m upwards

Large pixels IPs

4T pixel Ips

Low noise pixel IPs

Wafer-scale (200mm) sensor capability

Over 40 years of cumulateddesign experience

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Page 4: CMOS Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors

The Large Area Sensor (LAS)

Sensors of different

sizes on the same

200mm wafer

0.35 m CMOS

Basic unit 270x270

pixels

X5 1350x1350

X2 540x540

X1 270x270

Wafer-scale possible

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Page 5: CMOS Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors

Region of Reset readout

No ROR

Image of a laser point

ROR readoutTint0 = 80, Tint1 = 30, Tint2 = 1

>140dB

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Page 6: CMOS Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors

6

NMOS

P-Well N-Well P-Well

N+ N+

P-substrate (~100s m thick)

N+ N+

N-Well

P+ P+

Diode NMOS PMOS100 %

efficiency

only NMOS

in pixel no

complicated

electronics

Complicated

electronics

NMOS

and

PMOS,i.e.

CMOS low

efficiency

How much CMOS in a CMOS sensor?

Page 7: CMOS Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors

NMOS

P-Well N-Well P-Well

N+ N+

P-substrate (~100s m thick)

N+ N+

N-Well

P+ P+

Diode NMOS PMOS

The INMAPS process

Deep P-Well

Standard CMOS with additional deep P-well implant. Quadruple well technology.

100% efficiency and CMOS electronics in the pixel.

Optimise charge collection and readout electronics separately!

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Page 8: CMOS Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors

8 INMAPSProof of principle

• Alternative to CALICE Si/W analogue ECAL

• No specific detector concept

• “Swap-in” solution leaving mechanical design unchanged

Tungsten1.4 mm

PCB~0.8 mm

Embedded VFE ASIC

Silicon sensor0.3mm

Diode pad calorimeter MAPS calorimeter

Page 9: CMOS Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors

• preShape• Gain 94uV/e• Noise 23e-• Power 8.9uW

• 150ns “hit” pulse wired to row logic

• Shaped pulses return to baseline

Pixel Architectures

preSample• Gain 440uV/e• Noise 22e-• Power 9.7uW

• 150ns “hit” pulse wired to row logic

• Per-pixel self-reset logic 9

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Page 10: CMOS Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors

• preShape Pixel• 4 diodes• 160 transistors• 27 unit capacitors• 1 resistor (4Mohm)

• Configuration SRAM– Mask– Comparator trim (4 bits)

• 2 variants: subtle changes to capacitors

Pixel Layouts

preSample Pixel• 4 diodes• 189 transistors• 34 unit capacitors

• Configuration SRAM– Mask– Comparator trim (4 bits)

• 2 variants: subtle changes to capacitors

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Deep p-well

Circuit N-Wells

Diodes

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Page 11: CMOS Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors

• 8.2 million transistors• 28224 pixels; 50 microns; 4 variants• Sensitive area 79.4mm2

– of which 11.1% “dead” (logic)

Test Chip Architecture

• Four columns of logic + SRAM– Logic columns serve 42 pixels– Record hit locations & timestamps– Local SRAM

• Data readout– Slow (<5Mhz)– Current sense amplifiers– Column multiplex– 30 bit parallel data output

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Page 12: CMOS Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors

Sensor Testing: Overview

Test pixels• preSample pixel variant• Analog output nodes• Fe55 stimulus• IR laser stimulus

Single pixel in array• Per pixel masks• Fe55 stimulus• Laser Stimulus

Full pixel array• preShape (quad0/1)• Pedestals & trim adjustment• Gain uniformity• Crosstalk• Beam test

quad0

quad1

12

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Page 13: CMOS Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors

Charge collection

• Amplitude results

• With/without deep pwell

• Compare

• Simulations “GDS”

• Measurements “Real”

(pixels with full electronics)

F

B

Pixel profiles

13

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Page 14: CMOS Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors

55Fe Source

•55Fe gives 5.9keV photon• Deposits all energy in “point” in silicon; 1640e−

• Sometimes will deposit maximum energy in a single diode and no charge will diffuse

absolute calibration! •Binary readout from pixel array

• Need to differentiate distribution to get signal peak in threshold units (TU)• Differential approximation

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Page 15: CMOS Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors

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CMOS Active Pixel Sensors are mature for high-end applications

Cost-effective solution for large-scale experiments

Low noise (< 10 e- rms)

Large area: up to 200mm wafer-scale

INMAPS process allows complex in-pixel architectures without degrading

the detection performance

Evaluating possibility of offering access to the INMAPS process to the

community

Conclusions

Page 16: CMOS Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors

Acknowledgements

For the Large Area Sensor (work carried out under the MI-3 Multidimensional

Integrated Intelligent Imaging Consortium)

A.T. Clark, N. Guerrini, J.P. Crooks, T. Pickering (Rutherford Appleton Laboratory)

N. Allinson (University of Sheffield)

S.E. Bohndiek (University College London)

For the CALICE-MAPS:

J.P. Crooks, R. Coath, M. Stanitzki, K.D. Stefanov, M. Tyndel, E.G. Villani

(Rutherford Appleton Laboratory)

J.A. Ballin, P.D.Dauncey, A.-M. Magnan, M. Noy (Imperial College

London)

Y. Mikami, N.K. Watson, O. Miller, V. Rajovic, J.A. Wilson (University of

Birmingham)

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