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Smart Pixels: In-pixel AI for on-sensor data filtering

Authors :
Parpillon, Benjamin
Syal, Chinar
Yoo, Jieun
Dickinson, Jennet
Swartz, Morris
Di Guglielmo, Giuseppe
Bean, Alice
Berry, Douglas
Valentin, Manuel Blanco
DiPetrillo, Karri
Badea, Anthony
Gray, Lindsey
Maksimovic, Petar
Mills, Corrinne
Neubauer, Mark S.
Pradhan, Gauri
Tran, Nhan
Wen, Dahai
Fahim, Farah
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

We present a smart pixel prototype readout integrated circuit (ROIC) designed in CMOS 28 nm bulk process, with in-pixel implementation of an artificial intelligence (AI) / machine learning (ML) based data filtering algorithm designed as proof-of-principle for a Phase III upgrade at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) pixel detector. The first version of the ROIC consists of two matrices of 256 smart pixels, each 25$\times$25 $\mu$m$^2$ in size. Each pixel consists of a charge-sensitive preamplifier with leakage current compensation and three auto-zero comparators for a 2-bit flash-type ADC. The frontend is capable of synchronously digitizing the sensor charge within 25 ns. Measurement results show an equivalent noise charge (ENC) of $\sim$30e$^-$ and a total dispersion of $\sim$100e$^-$ The second version of the ROIC uses a fully connected two-layer neural network (NN) to process information from a cluster of 256 pixels to determine if the pattern corresponds to highly desirable high-momentum particle tracks for selection and readout. The digital NN is embedded in-between analog signal processing regions of the 256 pixels without increasing the pixel size and is implemented as fully combinatorial digital logic to minimize power consumption and eliminate clock distribution, and is active only in the presence of an input signal. The total power consumption of the neural network is $\sim$ 300 $\mu$W. The NN performs momentum classification based on the generated cluster patterns and even with a modest momentum threshold, it is capable of 54.4\% - 75.4\% total data rejection, opening the possibility of using the pixel information at 40MHz for the trigger. The total power consumption of analog and digital functions per pixel is $\sim$ 6 $\mu$W per pixel, which corresponds to $\sim$ 1 W/cm$^2$ staying within the experimental constraints.<br />Comment: IEEE NSS MIC RSTD 2024

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2406.14860
Document Type :
Working Paper