
Updated:
05.12.2008
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Introduction
Switched Capacitor Arrays (SCA) are custom made silicon chips which can
sample an analog input signal at high speed, then are read out at lower speed.
SCAs have been used in physics since many years successfully, but mostly
chips have been designed for a specific experiment. When the
MEG experiment was designed at PSI, it was
clear that a SCA chip is required to deal with the pile-up problems
anticipated in that experiment. Rather than developing another specialized
chip, it has been decided to design a SCA chip which can be used in many
different experiments and industrial applications. This chip is now available
through the PSI technology transfer program, together with an evaluation board.
DRS1
The Domino Sampling Chip (DSC) was designed by Ch. Broenninam at PSI
in 1998 [Ch. Broennimann et al., NIM A420, 264 (1999)]. It had 128 sampling
cells running at up to 1.2 GHz and was used in the PIBETA experiment at PSI.
Based on this development, the DRS1 chip has been designed in 2001
by Stefan Ritt. It was a single-channel prototype for test purposes only.

DRS2
The DRS2 chip designed in 2003 had already 10 channels with 1024 bins.
It runs at up to 4.5 GHz and is used in the MEG experiment to read 900
channels of PMTs and 3000 channels of drift chamber anodes and cathodes from
2006 to 2008. The nonlinearity and temperature dependence of this chip
require extensive calibrations.
 
DRS3
The DRS3 chip designed in 2006 fixed the temperature dependence
by utilizing one operational transient amplifier (OTA) per sampling cell. Its
analog bandwidth is 450 MHz (-3 dB). This chip was produced only for
prototype studies.

DRS4
The DRS4 chip designed in 2007 has an increased bandwidth of 950 MHz
(-3dB) and fixes a few other flaws of the DRS3. It contains 9 channels each
1024 cells deep, which can be daisy-chained to achieve a virtually unlimited
sampling depth. The sampling frequency ranges from 0.5 GSPS to 6 GSPS, while
a on-chip PLL stabilizes the sampling frequency with a jitter better than 30 ps.
The power requirement is 40 mW per channel or less, depending on the sampling
speed. A special readout mode reduces the dead time 30 ns times the number of
cells to be read out (for example 3us for a region of 100 cells).
It has been shown that timing measurements with an accuracy of a few picoseconds
are possible with the DRS4 chip.

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