Results from neutron irradiation at the OSU reactor.

July 2000 test
blue_ball.gif Conditions of the test.
- Seven CSC front end anode boards have been irradiated, ## 2, 3, 4, 18 (with CMP16F chips on them)
and ## 21, 23, 26 (with chips CMP16E irradiated earlier in the 63 MeV proton beam at the UC Davis
with total ionizing dose of 60 krad, 30 krad and 13 krad correspondingly).
- The boards were unpowered.
- At the position the boards were placed the measured neutron flux was 4.7*10**9 n/(cm**2 * sec)
at the neutron energy 100 keV < En < 10 MeV. There is also a significant gamma flux with effective
dose rate of ~7 krad/min.
- The boards were tested on the ASIC test stand at Fermilab a month later after irradiation.

blue_ball.gif Data and specific operating conditions.
- Table 1. Doses for boards. Note that the neutron fluence is 0.6*10**12 n/cm**2 and
gamma TID = 1.78 krad for 10 years of LHC operation.

Board # Neutron dose
(10**12 n/cm**2)
Time Gamma dose
(krad)
Comment
2 1.24 min 15 sec 30.8CMP16F
3 1.86 min 23 sec 46.3------
4* 3.010 min 38 sec 77.1------
18* 6.024 min 17 sec 154.3------
21* 1.24 min 15 sec 30.8CMP16E, after proton TID of 60 krad
23* 1.86 min 23 sec 46.3CMP16E, after proton TID of 30 krad
26* 3.010 min 38 sec 77.1CMP16E, after proton TID of 13 krad

The boards marked with * did not work after irradiation.

blue_ball.gif Results.
- Only 2 boards (## 2,3 - CMP16F) survived after irraditon with dose equivalent to doses of 20 and 30 LHC years.
The others, for example, boards ## 4 and 18 have much higher threshold (300-400 fC) and much bigger noise.
The parameters of board #2 before and after neutron irradiation are given in Table 2 (board #3 has similar behaviour).
The Average and RMS characterize the parameter distribution over 14 channels of the board ( 2 channels with
max. and min. excluded). Max-Min is the difference between maximum and minimum values of the parameter
within 16 channels of the board.

- Table 2. Board #2 parameters before and after irradiation.

Average
When Qthr, fC Noise, fC Gain, mv/fC Offset, mV
Before17.6 +- 0.3 1.5 +- 0.028.9 +- 0.04 51.6 +- 2.6
After18.3 +- 0.3 1.2 +- 0.0112.6 +- 0.05 -22.7 +- 4.1
RMS
When Qthr, fC Noise, fC Gain, mv/fC Offset, mV
Before1.23 0.06 0.16 9.55
After1.31 0.05 0.18 15.27
Max - Min
When Qthr, fC Noise, fC Gain, mv/fC Offset, mV
Before4.89 0.50 0.75 42.31
After4.69 0.23 0.99 54.17

- Looks like the gain and the discriminator offset are much more affected by the neutron irradiation than
by the proton beam. The board depicts the different picture of the threshold's and offset's behaviour after neutron
exposure. The gain increased by 40% compare to a rise of a few percents at the dose of 5 krad in the proton beam.
Also the change in the discriminator offset is quite large and has a sign opposite to one in the proton beam.
The good news is that as a combined result of two opposite contributions the threshold increased by 4% only.
- The time resolution (RMS) was not deteriorated by the neutron irradiation. It remains to be less than 1 nsec.
at Qin=100 fC and Qthr=18 fC.
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Last modified: Mon Nov 27 16:00:00 CST 2000 teren@fnal.gov