Process Technologies Markets Products and Services Capabilities
About PSI Library News Careers contact Events
 


Abstract: A Preamplifier-Shaper-Stretcher Integrated Circuit System for Use with Germanium Strip Detectors

U. Jagadish, C. L. Britton, Jr., M. N. Ericson, W. L. Bryan, W.G. Schwarz, M.E. Read, R.A. Kroeger, "A Preamplifier-Shaper-Stretcher Integrated Circuit System for Use with Germanium Strip Detectors," IEEE Trans. Nucl. Sci. 47 (6) , 1868-1871 (2000).

Article: 115 kB

This material is posted here with permission of the IEEE. Such permission of the IEEE does not in any way imply IEEE endorsement of any of PSI's products or services. Internal or personal use of this material is permitted. However, permission to reprint/republish this material for advertising or promotional purposes or for creating new collective works for resale or redistribution must be obtained from the IEEE by sending a blank e-mail message to info.pub.permission@ieee.org .

By choosing to view this document, you agree to all provisions of the copyright laws protecting it.

Abstract

A 16-channel Integrated Circuit readout electronics chip is being developed for use with a germanium strip detector. Such a system will provide superior energy resolution with 2-dimensional imaging in a single instrument that can be used for X-ray imaging and nuclear line gamma-ray spectroscopy. As part of the total ASIC development, prototype ICs of a typical channel have been designed, fabricated and tested. These integrated circuits include a low-noise, variable gain, preamplifier circuit that can detect both positive and negative going input charges, a 4-pole pulse shaper with variable peaking times and a stretcher circuit that can do a peak detect and hold for the different peaking times. The integrated circuits are fabricated in a 1.2 micron n-well CMOS process. The noise performance for this system was measured to be 185erms +14e/pF for a 2ms peaking time and gain at ~200mV/fC. Linearity measurements in both inverting and non-inverting modes of operation were approximately +/-1%. Peaking times from 0.5 microseconds to 8 microseconds and gain adjustments to get up to 400mV/fC per channel were done through digital switching.

Keywords

,

ws-ieee-1999-tns



   
 
Home Search Site Map Legal/Privacy