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Effects of proton irradiation on 60 GHz CMOS transceiver chip for multi-Gbps communication in high-energy physics experiments

Authors :
Aziz, Imran
Dancila, Dragos
Dittmeier, Sebastian
Siligaris, Alexandre
Dehos, Cedric
De Lurgio, Patrik Martin
Djurcic, Zelimir
Drake, Gary
Jimenez, Jose Luis Gonzalez
Gustafsson, Leif
Kim, Don-Won
Locci, Elizabeth
Pfeiffer, Ulrich
Vazquez, Pedro Rodriquez
Rohrich, Dieter
Schoening, Andre
Soltveit, Hans Kristian
Ullaland, Kjetil
Vincent, Pierre
Yang, Shiming
Brenner, Richard
Aziz, Imran
Dancila, Dragos
Dittmeier, Sebastian
Siligaris, Alexandre
Dehos, Cedric
De Lurgio, Patrik Martin
Djurcic, Zelimir
Drake, Gary
Jimenez, Jose Luis Gonzalez
Gustafsson, Leif
Kim, Don-Won
Locci, Elizabeth
Pfeiffer, Ulrich
Vazquez, Pedro Rodriquez
Rohrich, Dieter
Schoening, Andre
Soltveit, Hans Kristian
Ullaland, Kjetil
Vincent, Pierre
Yang, Shiming
Brenner, Richard
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

This article presents the experimental results of 17 MeV proton irradiation on a 60 GHz low power, half-duplex transceiver (TRX) chip implemented in 65 nm CMOS technology. It supports short range point-to-point data rate up to 6 Gbps by employing on-off keying (OOK). To investigate the irradiation hardness for high-energy physics (HEP) applications, two TRX chips were irradiated with total ionising doses (TID) of 74 and 42 kGy and fluence of 1.4 x 10(14)N(eq)/cm(2) and 0.8 x 10(14)N(eq)/cm(2) for RX and TX modes, respectively. The chips were characterised by pre- and post-irradiation analogue voltage measurements on different circuit blocks as well as through the analysis of wireless transmission parameters like bit error rate (BER), eye diagram, jitter etc. Post-irradiation measurements have shown certain reduction in performance but both TRX chips have been found operational through over the air measurements at 5 Gbps. Moreover, very small shift in the carrier frequency was observed after the irradiation.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1234764633
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1049.joe.2018.5402