Post on 16-Dec-2015
Date: 4/12/2012
Voxtel Contacts: George Williams (georgew@voxtel-inc.com)Vinit Dhulla (vinitd@voxtel-inc.com)Adam Lee (adaml@voxtel-inc.com)
Address: 15985 NW Schendel Ave, Suite 200, Beaverton, OR 97006
Voxtel SPAD/SiPM, ROIC, and Multi-channel TDC Technologies
Presentation Agenda
Voxtel OverviewSilicon APD DevelopmentAQC Based ROIC DevelopmentHybridization DevelopmentOther DOE Related ROIC Development ActivityMulti-channel, Reconfigurable Pulse-processing
Instrumentation
3
About Voxtel
Corporate Offices / Voxtel Opto (Beaverton, Oregon)• Contract Administration• Opto Products Group
− InGaAs and silicon photodiodes, avalanche photodiodes (APDs), photoreceivers, and focal plane arrays
− Readout integrated circuits (ROICs) for imaging, LADAR, and radiation detection
− Single-photon-sensitive detectors and instruments− Electro-Optic systems engineering
Voxtel Nano (Eugene, Oregon)• Nano Products Group
− Colloidal semiconductor quantum dots (PbS, CdSe, InP, SnTe, etc.)− Rare-earth-doped nanocrystals (ZnS, YVO4, LaF3, etc.)− Ligand design and custom surface functionalization− Optical up- and down-conversion− Security inks and covert taggants− Nanocrystal-sensitized photovoltaic and photoconductive devices− Continuous flow reactors for nanocrystal/quantum dot synthesis
• Analytical Facilities
Selected Voxtel Products
Single-Element InGaAs Photodiodes and APDs
Free-Space Coupled Photoreceivers
InGaAs Photodiode and APD Arrays
Fiber-PigtailedPhotoreceivers
Multi-Channel Time Recorder Boards
CMOS Readout Integrated Circuits Focal Plane Arraysfor Imaging and LADAR
Proposed Detector Arrays & ROIC Standards
DETECTORS• 50 micron square pixel• 1 x 1mm2 (fiber) and 4 x 4 mm2 (calorimetry) arrays• compatible with face-to-face (f2f) or TSV bonding• Back-illuminated for 300nm responseROICs:• Matched to SPAD arrays• 1 x 1 mm2
• nsec TOF on chip• MHz count rates• 10s photons dynamic range
• 4 x 4 mm2
• 100 ps TOF in fabric of SPAD array• 1000s photons dynamic range
Back-illuminated Silicon Gm-APD Development
• Implemented at Tower/Jazz • Domestic source• fine photolithography (0.25µm and 0.18µm) • availability of silicon-on-insulator (SOI) wafer options• shallow Trench Isolation (STI) and Deep Trench Isolation (STI) • double-layer metal-metal (MiM) capacitors • availability of a stitching option for large area, photocomposed wafer-scale integration• mature and stabile• government-funded back-thinning capabiltiy under development• we have transistor radiation models
• Implemented in a commercial, 200mm CMOS fab
• compatible with monolithic circuit integration
• compatible with modern 3D wafer stacking technologies (>200mm)
• Back-illuminated to improve UV-Blue optical response
Base Gm-APD Pixel Designs
N+/”p+ sinker” junction N+/p-well junction
Sinker is a custom p+ implant developed by Voxtel in the Jazz process
• used to achieve full depletion before junction breakdown
• used to “focus” high field region and avoid pre-mature edge breakdown
N+/p-well junction uses only the standard implants
• Implemented on SOI wafers• Heavily doped p+ implant at BOX interface used to biases substrate• STI (shallow trench isolation) / DTI (deep trench isolation) used for (sub)pixel
isolation
TCAD Models of Gm-APD Pixel Variations
Deep Trench Isolation N-well Implanted STI
N-well Guard Ring(connected to n+)
Multiple Guard Rings
Simulated/Measured I-V Curves for Various Doping Levels
• Used to calibrate Voxtel’s process models with Jazz fab• process parameters not published by fabs, they need to be deduced
• Measured breakdown voltage closely match the simulated values (within 10%)• validates the design and control of the custom sinker implant
• Breakdown voltage is uniform between devices on the same wafer and across different wafers.
SiPM Performance
Measured Gain/DCR vs. State-of-Art (SOA)
• Gain sufficient for photon counting (1 p.e. pulse), photon # discrimination, and integration with electronics
• Initial DCR is higher then desired• Not enough experimental data to analyze
and fully characterize DCR sources
• DCR is much better than other CMOS fabricated SiPMs (e.g. RMD)
• Recent design run includes experimental DCR test structures and design features
Digital SPAD Architecture implemented in CMOS
Cross section of Jazz Semiconductors thick film SOI processes. • custom implants used to optimize the
process for fabricating low breakdown Gm-APD designs
• trench isolation enables isolation of active circuits with the photodetector elements.
Demonstrated Digital SPAD features include: • active quenching, • programmable hold-off timing, • threshold detection, • photon counting / time-to-digital converter• in-pixel APD bias NUC, and• integrated fuse
35-micron Pitch Digital SPAD Pixel Block Diagram
Each pixel features:• an active quenching circuit with globally controlled pre-charge and quench timing
- 3rd generation of an AQC design originally developed for Geiger mode (Gm) • integrated SRAM with “power down” circuits
- enables individual characterization of each pixel in the SPAD array. - used to disable “noisy” pixels across the array, lowering the detector dark counts
Quench Time: 5.0 – 900 ns
Pre-charge Time: 2 – 12 ns
Output Pulse Time: 2 – 10 ns
35-micron Pitch Digital SPAD Pixel Layout
Layout of Digital SPAD pixel design on a 35-µm pixel pitch
• An APD was implemented in the monolithic design (upper left hand corner) for test
• APD fills 47% of the total pixel area
• In hybrid (wafer bonded) designs, the pixel will be shorted
Monolithically integrated APD AQC and quench
delay generator
Output pulse generator and driver
SRAM and power down
VX-808 Digital SPAD Testchip
• will be used to evaluate both APD designs
• used to re-test s AQC circuits• taped out to Jazz Semi. Jan 2012.
(back May 2012)
Pixel array testchip (40 x 40) with 35 µm pixel pitch
APD and SiPM test structures
Wafer-scale Back-thinning Process
Starting Wafer Stack Attach Wafer w/3m Bond Remove Handle Wafer
Remove BOX Etch to Bond Pads Bond Device
Sensor Hybridization (3D Stacking) and Thinning
8” ROIC wafer bonded to matching 6” SOI photodiode wafer.
Bonded/Thinned (6” to 8” wafers)
Mesa Etch/Pad Opening
Bonded Device
after bonding and thinning, detector mesas are formed (grey areas) and bond pad openings
are etched to allow bonding
Reliable Wafer-scale Back-thinning Process
Back-thinned SiPM Devices
Voxtel SPAD/SiPM Phase II SBIR Efforts Under Review
Topic 61: Wafer-Scale Geiger-mode Silicon Photomultiplier Arrays Fabricated Using Domestic CMOS Fab Characterize latest generation of Gm APDs fabricated in Phase I Optimize a low DCR Gm SPAD (SiPM) using Jazz process Assumes a 25-µm pixel pitch Optimized for backside illumination Compatible with large area stitching, but included in program
Topic 63a: Digital Silicon Photomultiplier Array Readout Integrated Circuits Characterize digital SPAD ROIC fabricated at Jazz in Phase I Develop a 25 micron pitch ROIC for digital SPADS Designed for hybrid stacked circuit of bump bond integration Design includes:
In-pixel AQC In-pixel (sub)pixel enable (Optional) monolithic Gm SPAD, which can be shorted for 3D stacked integration* Sub-block asynchronous TDC
Programmable threshold
VX-798: High Dynamic Range, Multi-threshold Photon Counting Sensor
VDET
CMPLo
CINT
+
-
DAC
Digital Counter and Readout
C1
RSHAPER
SRAM
VA
VB VC
IIN
RINT C2 CL
DAC SRAM
+
- CMPHi
VX-798 Unit Cell Block Diagram VX-798 Array with Thick, Fully-Depleted Silicon Sensor
Model VX-798 Features
• Calibrated, dual-level threshold detection
• Programmable 30-bit / (2 x 15-bit) photon counting
• Low-noise front end optimized for 10 ns and 150 ns bunch timing
• 130 µm pixel pitch, 48 x 48 array, currently developing a full reticle version of design
VOXTEL PROPRIETARY
Model VX-803 Features
• Low-noise pixel design with discriminator and time stamp in each pixel – 300 ns timing resolution at 1 ms gate time
• Sparse readout of array between bunch train uses pixel “hit” flags for event driven readout
• 15 µm pixel pitch, 960 x 448 format array
• ROIC designed for wafer –to-wafer hybridization (Ziptronix)
Picture of Model VX-803
VX-803: Time-Resolved HEP Event Detection with Sparse Readout
vdet
CCDS
idet
CSH
vo
RST CAL
RSEL
1
vrst
vref
vramp
3.8 -
+
VX-803 (15 µm) pixel Layout
VX-803 Pixel Block Diagram
VOXTEL PROPRIETARY
VX-803 Noise Contributors
VX-807: Asynchronous, Time-Resolved, Event-driven Photon Detector
256 x 256 256 x 256
256 x 256 256 x 256
Model VX-807 Features
• Low noise amplifier and discrimination designed for soft x-ray (530 eV) single photon detection
• Handshaking and address arbitration logic used to handle real-time readout of hit pixels with 40 ns timing resolution
• Supports >20 MHz photon count rates
• Totally asynchronous operation
• 40 um pixel pitch, 492 x 492 full reticle array
VX-807 Unit Cell Block Diagram
VX-807 Simulated Performance
VX-807 Floorplan
VOXTEL PROPRIETARY
Model VX-803• Large format, low-noise, mega-pixel, hybrid BSI image sensor
• Fabricated on SOI to achieve full depletion using high resistivity silicon
• Fabricated on SOI wafers for tolerance to transient singe event effects
• Capacitive transimpedance amplifier (CTIA) with correlated double sampling (CDS)
• Radiation hard-by-design techniques on a 0.18 µm CMOS process to increase radiation total ionizing does tolerance
SOI CMOS Imager Wafer
Photon Transfer Curve
VX-803: Rad-hard SOI CMOS Star Tracker
VX-819: 2D-Array Event-driven Ripple Waveform Sampling
Model VX-819 • Programmable pulse detection circuit• 40 samples in 55 um pixel• Programmable sample rate ( 1 ns minimum)• Used with curve fitting to achieve 50-ps timing resolution
VX-819 Pixel Layout
VX-819 Pixel Block Diagram
VOXTEL PROPRIETARY
In Progress: PS-Waveform Recorder (Phase I SBIR Development)
Time resolution versus analog bandwidth for a fixed sampling rate of 40 GSa/s, for input signals
of 20 and 50 photo-electrons (Ganat 2008).
Time resolution vs sampling jitter for input signals of 100 photo-electrons. The sampling rate is 40 GSa/s, the
analog bandwidth is 1.5 GHz (Ganat 2008)
Pulse sampling and timing extraction. (Bogdan, 2009)
The VX-251 shown in the test platform used to assess
functionality.
Microscope photo of one end of the VX-805 ROIC, showing the landing spot for the APD die.
Multi-channel Time-to-Digital Converter (TDC) and Binary Pulse Processor (BPP)
• Features for Existing Product• 8 CMOS input channels or 64 LVDS input channels • Timing resolution < 50ps• Measurement range of 13ms (extendable)• Count rates of 20 million counts per second (cps) on each channel• Large internal memory buffer, with a minimum storage capacity of 65,535 events per channel
(262,000 events per channel for 8 channel instrument) • Gigabit Ethernet (GbE) to communicate with the host PC. • Single 5V power supply for operation• Software GUI with statistical analysis features
• Auto (Cross) Correlation demonstrated with Ƭmin = 3 ns
• Binary Pulse Processing, Time-over-threshold, and Multi-threshold Processing
• 64, 128, and 512 versions under development
High channel Count, Re-configurable Multi-Purpose Pulse-processing Platform
Planned Features
• Easily reconfigurable pulse-processing platform with multiple daughter boards to meet different application needs
• Application-specific, pluggable front-end modules – time-stamping (analog and digital inputs), analog to digital conversion, auto and cross-correlation
• Up to 1000 channels• High timing resolution (tens of pico-seconds to sub-ns, depending on the channel
count and application)• Data transfer rates of up to 400 MB/s• Variable measurement times, depending on the application• Ability to time-stamp positive and negative edges• Ability to measure really short pulses (<1ns)• Minimum dead-time between pulses (<3ns)• High input pulse count rates (> 250 MHz)• User friendly software GUI
Thank You