Brazilian Researchers Develop Microchip for LHC
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follows one article published on the day (07/08) in the website of the ”Agência
FAPESP” noting that Brazilian Researchers develop microchip for LHC.
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Falcão
Articles
Brazilian
Researchers Develop
Microchip for LHC
By
Elton Alisson,
July 08,
2015
(Photo: Marcos Santos/USP Imagens)
Sampa, a chip designed to read data from gas detectors
such as the TPC and Muon Chamber.
|
Agência FAPESP – Researchers at the University of São Paulo’s
Physics Institute (IF-USP) and Engineering School (Poli-USP), in collaboration
with the Aeronautics Technology Institute (ITA) and the Gleb Wataghin Physics
Institute at the University of Campinas (IFGW-UNICAMP), both also in São Paulo
State, Brazil, are developing a microchip for use in an experiment at the
world’s largest particle accelerator, the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), which is
operated by the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) in
Switzerland.
The second version of the prototype chip, developed as
part of the “Design of a signal acquisition and digital processing ASIC for time
projection chamber of ALICE experiment” project, supported
by FAPESP, will be completed this month (July 2015).
“The idea is to test this second version of the
prototype in September and, if all goes well, to start production in 2016,”
said Marcelo Gameiro Munhoz, a professor at IF-USP and a participant in the
project.
Munhoz told Agência FAPESP that
the chip, called Sampa, will be used in ALICE (A Large Ion Collider
Experiment). A heavy-ion detector on the LHC ring, ALICE is one of the four
large experiments at the CERN facility. It is an international collaboration
involving 1,300 scientists at more than 100 research institutions in 30
countries around the world, including IF-USP.
The experiment will be upgraded in the years ahead so
that it can be used to study rare phenomena involving particles produced in
heavy-ion collisions beginning in 2020, when the collision production rate in
the LHC will be increased from 500 hertz (Hz) to approximately 50 kilohertz
(kHz).
“The LHC was shut down for a power upgrade in 2013 and
is now restarting at a center-of-mass energy of 13 teraelectron-volts, up from
7-8 TeV previously,” Munhoz explained.
“The next planned shutdown is in 2018-19, when the
collision rate will again be increased. This will also require an upgrade for
ALICE, because without it the experiment’s detection system won’t be able to
operate at the higher collision rate.”
One of the changes to be made to ALICE in the years
ahead, according to Munhoz, involves the chips integrated into two of the
detectors used by the experiment: the Time Projection Chamber (TPC), the main
device for tracking and identifying charged particles, and the Muon Chamber, a
forward spectrometer that detects muons, particles similar to electrons but 200
times heavier.
To be able to detect the huge number of heavy-ion
collisions that will be produced in the LHC beginning in 2020, the chips
connected to the TPC and Muon Chamber will need to operate continuously without
a trigger, such as that used in the current system to detect events and record
them for later analysis.
“The trigger fires a signal when the detector sees a particle
collision. Normally the chips connected to the TPC and Muon Chamber start
processing and storing data only when they receive this signal,” Munhoz said.
“With the higher collision rate, the chips will have
to acquire data continuously, so there won’t be any need for a trigger to tell
them when to start operating.”
Multiple Functions
According to Munhoz, the Sampa chip is custom designed
to read data from gas detectors like the TPC and Muon Chamber.
Each chamber is a cylinder filled with gas. When a particle
passes through the cylinder, the gas is ionized as its electrons are stripped
out by the particle.
Currently, a sensor located at the extremity of the
detectors counts the electrons liberated from the gas and generates a charge
pulse that is captured by a set of chips connected to the TPC and the Muon
Chamber. The chips amplify and shape this signal.
Next, Munhoz explained, another group of chips
transforms the signal into a stream of bits and pre-processes the digitized
data to reduce the amount of information to be stored for later analysis by the
researchers who participate in the experiment.
“The challenge for Sampa will be to integrate all
these functions into a single electronic circuit instead of the several chips
that do the work today,” he said. Eighty thousand chips will be produced to
instrument the TPC and Muon Chamber detectors, at an estimated cost of US$1
million.
Each silicon chip will measure 9x9 mm and will be made
in Taiwan because Brazil has no factories capable of producing chips to Sampa’s
specifications. “Integrating several functions into a single chip requires
advanced technology to fit everything onto a tiny device,” Munhoz said.
The US$1 million investment to produce the chips will
represent 0.5% of the total cost of ALICE, which is projected to reach US$200
million, and will be the Brazilian researchers’ first contribution to the
instrumentation for the experiment.
“We joined ALICE in 2006, and since then we’ve had
access to the same data as any other member of the collaboration. We’ve also
been doing plenty of joint research. But until now we hadn’t been able to
collaborate on fabrication of the detectors,” Munhoz said.
The ALICE experiment is designed to study quark-gluon
plasma, a state of matter thought to have formed in the first microseconds
after the Big Bang, when the Universe was born.
Quarks and gluons are always confined in hadrons (such
as protons, neutrons, and pi mesons) and have never been observed in isolation
outside them.
In the extremely high temperatures generated by
collisions in the LHC, similar to those just after the Big Bang, Munhoz
explained, the bonds between quarks and gluons are broken and they are no
longer confined in hadrons, enabling scientists to study the phenomenon of
confinement, which remains a mystery in physics.
“Because ALICE is more interested in measuring the
trajectories of the particles produced in collisions of nuclei, which are
hundreds of times more numerous than proton collisions, it generates larger
amounts of data per collision than the LHC’s other experiments, like ATLAS or
CMS,” he said. In 2012, the ATLAS and CMS experiments proved the existence of
the Higgs boson, the particle that explains why some elementary particles have
mass.
“The Sampa chip will have to handle the even larger
amount of data that will be generated by the experiment beginning in 2020,”
Munhoz said.
According to him, other collider experiments are also
interested in the Sampa chip. They include the Solenoidal Tracker At RHIC
(STAR), one of the experiments attached to the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider
(RHIC) in the United States.
In addition to particle detectors, the chip is being
studied for use in other applications, such as producing X-ray images “in
color” (to show all wavelengths that are present) and measuring the neutrons
emitted by nuclear reactors.
“Sampa is compact, so it’s very useful for
instrumentalizing large detectors like those of the ALICE experiment as well as
neutron detectors used in neutron imaging,” Munhoz said.
Source: WebSite Agência FAPESP - http://agencia.fapesp.br/en/
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