Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
What is NIM ?
The Nuclear Instrumentation Module (NIM) standard defines
mechanical and electrical specifications for electronics
modules used in experimental particle and nuclear physics. The
NIM standard was defined by the U.S. Atomic Energy
Commission in 1969 with the latest revision in 1990.
Model
DG 535
NIM Modules
various
PTS 120
Analog RF, CW
TTL for control (HCT TTL), i.e. real TTL, not just compatible. Cannot be
terminated in 50 Ohms.
10MHz Ref out, RF sine wave, 0.4Vrms
DC power needed
The Bin must supply 12 and 24 volts DC power to the modules via a
backplane; the standard also specifies 6 V DC and 220 V or 110 V AC pins,
but not all NIM bins provide them.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_Instrumentation_Module
NIM positive logic is used for slow to medium speed logic signals, e.g. counters, with
repetition rates from dc to about 1MHz. The NIM standard defines positive logic signals
as follows
Note that although this signal is normally about 5V it is NOT TTL compatible and
should not be connected to a TTL input because it can be more than 5V which
might damage a TTL input.
This lecture, up till now, has dealt only with VOLTAGE signals not current
signals.
NAND Gate 1
NAND Gate 2
Logic Symbols
OFF
ON
This transistor
must be able to
sink 1.6 mA. (or
16 mA for a
fanout of 10)
1.6 mA
Logic Symbols
NAND Gate 1
NAND Gate 2
Logic 1
Logic 0
ECL
An ECL signal is like a fast NIM signal
offset by 0.8 V
But It is has two complementary
current outputs each giving a change
of about 8 mA into a 100 Ohm
terminating resisitor.
8mA x 100 ohms = 0.8V
So ECL is a current based signal
One output