Paper |
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MOPHA059 |
Ultra-High Precision Timing System for the CEA-Laser Megajoule |
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- S. Hocquet, N. Bazoge, Ph. Hours, D. Monnier-Bourdin
Greenfield Technology, Massy, France
- T. Falgon, T. Somerlinck
CEA, LE BARP cedex, France
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High power laser such as the Laser MegaJoule (LMJ) or National Ignition Facility (NIF) requires different types of trigger precision to synchronize all the laser beams, plasma diagnostics and generate fiducials. Greenfield Technology, which designs and produces picosecond delay generator and timing system for about 20 years, has been hired by CEA to develop new products to meet the LMJ requirements. About 2000 triggers are about to be set to control and synchronize all of the 176 laser beams on the target with a precision better than 40 ps RMS. Among these triggers, Greenfield Technology’s GFT1012 is a 4-channels delay generator challenging ultra-high performances: an ultra-low jitter between 2 slaves below 4 ps RMS and a peak-to-peak wander over 1 week lower than 6 ps due to a thermal control of the most sensitive part (the thermal drift is below 1 ps/°C) and specific developments for clock management and restitution. On going investigation should bring the jitter close to 2 ps RMS between 2 slaves.
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Poster MOPHA059 [0.488 MB]
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DOI • |
reference for this paper
※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-ICALEPCS2019-MOPHA059
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About • |
paper received ※ 30 September 2019 paper accepted ※ 09 October 2019 issue date ※ 30 August 2020 |
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TUBPR02 |
A 4-Channel, 7 ns-Delay Tuning Range, 400 fs-Step, 1.8 ps RMS Jitter, Delay Generator Implemented in a 180 nm CMOS Technology |
733 |
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- F.C. Badets, G.A. Billiot, S. Bouquet, B. Caillat, A. Fustier, F. Lepin, C. Magnier, G. Regis, A. Spataro
CEA, Grenoble, France
- D. Monnier-Bourdin, B. Riondet
Greenfield Technology, Breuillet, France
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This paper discloses the integration, in a 180 nm CMOS technology, of a 4-channel delay generator dedicated to synchronization down to a few ps. The delay generation principle relies on the linear charge of a capacitor triggered by the input pulse. The output pulse generation occurs when the capacitor voltage exceeds a threshold voltage. The delay full scale is automatically set to match the period of the master clock, ranging from 5-7 ns, with the help of an embedded calibration circuit. The delay value is controlled with the help of a 14-bit DAC setting the threshold voltage, which leads to a 400 fs delay step. Among other features, the chip embeds a combination mode of either 2 or 4 channels to output narrow width pulses. The chip is fully compliant with LVDS, LVPECL and CML differential input pulses and outputs LVPECL pulses. The chip has been fully characterized over temperature (0 to 60 °C) and supply voltage (± 10%). The chip is compliant with pulse repetition frequencies up to 20 MHz. The measured INL is 100 LSB and the RMS jitter is 1.8 ps. The power consumption has been measured to 350 mW for 4 active channels.
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Slides TUBPR02 [5.312 MB]
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DOI • |
reference for this paper
※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-ICALEPCS2019-TUBPR02
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About • |
paper received ※ 30 September 2019 paper accepted ※ 09 October 2019 issue date ※ 30 August 2020 |
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TUBPR06 |
Laser Megajoule Timing System |
749 |
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- T. Somerlinck, T. Falgon
CEA, LE BARP cedex, France
- N. Bazoge, S. Hocquet, D. Monnier-Bourdin
Greenfield Technology, Massy, France
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The aim of the Laser Megajoule facility (LMJ) is to deliver more than 1 MJ of laser energy to targets for high energy density physics experiments. In association with Greenfield Technology, we developed a specific timing system to synchronize the 176 laser beams on the target with a precision better than 40 ps rms and to trigger and mark plasma diagnostics. The final architecture, settled and used since three years, is based on a master oscillator that sends a clock with serial data through a fiber-optic network, allowing to synchronize more than 500 delay generators spread over the large LMJ facility. The settings of each laser beam and the various experiments require different sampling rates (multi to single shot) and 16 groups for coactivity. Three kinds of delay generators, electrical and optical, are designed for standard precision (<150 ps jitter) and the third is designed for high precision. Each output deliver trigger or fiducial signals with jitter down to 5 ps and peak-to-peak wander less than 10 ps over a week. Test performance of this LMJ timing system is in progress all over the LMJ facility. Besides it will be installed on the petawatt laser (PETAL) this year.
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Slides TUBPR06 [58.283 MB]
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DOI • |
reference for this paper
※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-ICALEPCS2019-TUBPR06
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About • |
paper received ※ 30 September 2019 paper accepted ※ 10 October 2019 issue date ※ 30 August 2020 |
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Export • |
reference for this paper using
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※ LaTeX,
※ Text/Word,
※ RIS,
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