Title :
Nuclear spectroscopy pulse height analysis based on digital signal processing techniques
Author :
Simões, J. Basílio ; Simões, P. C P S ; Gorreia, C.M.B.A.
Author_Institution :
Dept. de Fisica, Coimbra Univ., Portugal
fDate :
8/1/1995 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A digital approach to pulse height analysis is presented. It consists of entire pulse digitization, using a flash analog-to-digital converter (ADC), being its height estimated by a floating point digital signal processor (DSP) as one parameter of a model best fitting to the pulse samples. The differential nonlinearity is reduced by simultaneously adding to the pulse, prior to its digitization, two analog signals provided by a digital-to-analog converter (DAC), One of them is a small amplitude dither signal used to eliminate a bias introduced by the fitting algorithm. The other, with large amplitude, corrects the ADC nonlinearities by a method similar to the well known Gatti´s sliding scale. The simulations carried out showed that, using a 12-bit flash ADC, a 14-bit DAC and a dedicated floating point DSP performing a polynomial fitting to the samples around the pulse peak, it is actually possible to process about 10000 events per second, with a constant height pulse dispersion of only 4 on 8192 channels and a very good differential linearity. A prototype system based on the Texas Instruments floating point DSP TMS320C31 and built following the presented methodology has already been tested and performed as expected
Keywords :
analogue-digital conversion; detector circuits; digital signal processing chips; nuclear electronics; particle spectrometers; pulse height analysers; spectroscopy; Texas Instruments floating point DSP TMS320C31; digital signal processing techniques; digital-to-analog converter; flash analog-to-digital converter; floating point digital signal processor; nuclear spectroscopy pulse height analysis; polynomial fitting; pulse digitization; Analog-digital conversion; Digital signal processing; Digital signal processors; Digital-analog conversion; Discrete event simulation; Linearity; Polynomials; Signal analysis; Signal processing algorithms; Spectroscopy;
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on