-40%
Stanford Research Systems SRS NIM BIN SR250 Gated Integrator and Boxcar Averager
$ 382.8
- Description
- Size Guide
Description
Comes from university surplus, see specs and description from manufacturer below. Manual is available for pdf download from their website.Boxcar Averager
from 90
SR250 — Gated integrator with gates to 2 ns
Gate width from 2 ns to 15 µs
(expandable to 150 µsec)
Internal rate generator
Active baseline subtraction
Shot-by-shot output
Gate output for precise gate timing
Average 1 to 10,000 samples
DC to 20 kHz repetition rate
Low jitter
Overview
The SR250 Gated Integrator is a versatile, high-speed, NIM module designed to recover fast analog signals from noisy backgrounds. The SR250 consists of a gate generator, a fast gated integrator, and exponential averaging circuitry. The gate generator, triggered internally or externally, provides an adjustable delay from a few nanoseconds to 100 ms before it generates a continuously adjustable gate with a width between 2 ns and 15 µs.
SR250 Gated Integrator
The SR250 Gated Integrator is a versatile, high-speed, NIM module designed to recover fast analog signals from noisy backgrounds. The SR250 consists of a gate generator, a fast gated integrator, and exponential averaging circuitry. The gate generator, triggered internally or externally, provides an adjustable delay from a few nanoseconds to 100 ms before it generates a continuously adjustable gate with a width between 2 ns and 15 µs. The gate delay can be set from the front panel or automatically scanned by applying a rear-panel control voltage. Scanning the gate allows the recovery of entire waveforms.
The fast gated integrator integrates the input signal during the gate. The output from the integrator is then normalized by the gate width to provide a voltage proportional to the average of the input signal during the sampling gate. This signal is further amplified and sampled by a low-droop sample-and-hold amplifier, and output via a front-panel BNC connector. The last sample output provides a shot-by-shot analysis of the signal, and makes the instrument a particularly useful component in a computer data acquisition system.
Triggering
The SR250 may be triggered internally or externally. The internal rate generator is continuously variable from 0.5 Hz to 20 kHz in nine ranges. The external trigger pulse may be as short as 5 ns, allowing the unit to be triggered with fast pulses from photodiodes and photomultipliers. Single shot and line triggering can also be selected.
Signal Inputs
The sensitivity of the instrument (volts out /volts in) may be set from 1 V/1 V to 1 V/5 mV. If additional gain is required, the SR250 can be used with the SR240 preamplifier. The input is protected to 100 V and has a 1 MΩ input impedance. An input filter rejects unwanted signals before the input is sampled by the integrator. Unwanted DC input offsets are easily nulled with a 10-turn potentiometer.
Gate Timing
The delay of the sample gate from the trigger is set by the delay multiplier and scale. The delay scale is multiplied by the setting on the 10-turn multiplier dial, allowing continuously adjustable delays from a few nanoseconds to 100 milliseconds. The delay multiplier may also be changed from the rear-panel control voltage input—a useful feature in applications requiring a scanning gate. Zero to ten volts at this input overrides the front-panel 0 to 10× delay multiplier. Insertion delay from trigger to gate is only 25 ns, and gate-delay jitter is only 20 ps + 0.01 % of the full-scale delay.
The width of the sampling gate may be continuously adjusted from 2 ns to 15 µs over eight width ranges. A simple modification of the unit allows gate widths of up to 150 µs. The front-panel gate output provides a representation of the gate that can be overlayed with the signal on an oscilloscope to provide a precise display of the gate timing.
Signal Outputs
A moving exponential average of 1 to 10,000 samples can be selected from the front panel. This traditional averaging technique is useful for pulling small signals from noisy backgrounds. In the case of a random white noise background, the signal-to-noise ratio increases by the square root of the number of samples in the average. This allows a S/N improvement of up to a factor of 100 using this technique alone. If no averaging is desired, or if averaging is to be performed a computer, the last sample output provides a voltage proportional to the average value of the input signal during the last gate period.
Average Reset
The reset button sets the average output to zero. The average may also be reset by a rear-panel logic input. The average reset input will accept a TTL signal or a switch closure to ground to reset the moving average output.
Polarity Control and Active Baseline Subtraction
The polarity of the last sample and averaged outputs is controlled by rear-panel toggle switches. Positive outputs can be selected for negative signals, and vice versa, allowing easy interfacing with unipolar analog-to-digital conversion systems. In addition to the traditional averaging modes, the SR250 possesses a unique Active Baseline Subtraction mode which allows you to actively cancel baseline drift. In the Active Baseline Subtraction mode the SR250 is triggered at twice the source repetition rate. On alternate triggers, when the signal is not present, only the baseline is sampled, and the SR250 inverts the polarity of the last sample output before it is added to the moving average. Thus, any baseline drift not associated with the source will be subtracted out.
Additional Outputs
The signal input is passed on to the signal output by a length of coaxial cable for termination and for gate timing. It is delayed exactly 3.5 ns from the input, and can be terminated to optimize either signal gain or response time. The gate output provides a pulse synchronized with the internal gate signal. The gate output is timed so that it can be overlayed with the signal output for precise adjustment of gate timing. The busy output provides a TTL timing pulse which is high while the unit is integrating, and goes low when the SR250 is ready to accept another trigger. These outputs help simplify experimental setup and troubleshooting.
SR250 Gated Integrator Specifications
Trigger
Internal trigger
0.5 Hz to 20 kHz
Line trigger
The gate generator may be triggered from AC line with adjustable phase.
External trigger
1 MΩ input impedance. Trigger threshold adjustable from 0.5 to 2 V. Input protected to ±100 VDC. Trigger pulse must be over threshold for >5 ns with a rise time <1 µs.
Manual trigger
The unit will trigger if trigger threshold is scanned through 0 VDC.
Trigger LED
LED blinks with each trigger.
Delay
Delay scale
1 ns to 10 ms
Delay multiplier
0 to 10× using 10-turn dial
Insertion delay
25 ns
Accuracy
2 ns or 5 % of full-scale delay, whichever is larger
Jitter
<20 ps or 0.01 % of full-scale delay, whichever is larger
Ext. delay control
Rear-panel 0 to 10 VDC input overrides front-panel delay multiplier. Input is used by SR200 or SR245 to scan the gate.
Gate Width
Width scale
1, 3, 10, 30, 100, 300 ns, 1, 3 µs
Width multiplier
Adjustable from 1× to 5×
Width accuracy
2 ns or 20 % of full scale, whichever is greater
Minimum width
2 ns, FWHM
Signal
Sensitivity (V
in
/V
out
)
1V/V to 5mV/V in a 1-2-5 sequence
Accuracy
3 % for gate widths >10 ns, decreasing to 50 % for a 2 ns gate
Filter
DC coupled, or AC coupled above 10 Hz or 10 kHz
Offset control
±0.4 VDC using 10-turn dial.
Over range LED
Indicates input is >2 VDC or LAST SAMPLE is greater than 10 VDC
Last Sample
Output
±10 VDC, 10 mA (20 mA short circuit limit), impedance <1 Ω
Polarity switch
Inverts LAST SAMPLE output
Responsivity
95 % (no more than 5 % of the previous last sample remains)
Averaging
Type
Exponential moving average
Number of samples
1, 3, 10, 30, ... to 10,000. LAST is selected for no averaging.
Average output
±10 VDC full scale, 10 mA (20 mA short circuit limit). Impedance <1 Ω
Droop rate
When no ext. triggers are present, droop rate is <1 % per minute (1 to 30 samples), and <0.01 % per minute (100 to 10,000 samples).
Average polarity and baseline subtraction
Rear-panel switch sets polarity of LAST SAMPLE before it is added to the average. Can also be used to invert polarity of average output. In TOGGLE position, every other sample is subtracted from the average. By triggering at twice the experiment's rep rate, baseline will be sampled on alternate triggers and subtracted from the average.
Toggle output
Rear-panel TTL signal changes state with each trigger. Output used with Active Baseline Subtraction feature to indicate if next sample will be added to, or subtracted from, the moving average. Toggle output can drive 50 Ω loads to +2 VDC.
Reset button
Resets average to zero
Remote reset
Rear-panel input resets average with a TTL low or switch closure.
Signal Input and Output
Signal input
1 MΩ input impedance, ±2 VDC usable range, protected to 100 VDC. Input offset drift <0.5 mV/hr. after 20 minute warm-up. Shot noise at input <0.5 mV. Coherent pickup <5 mV (easily canceled with offset knob in fixed gate applications).
Signal output
SIGNAL OUTPUT is the input signal delayed by 3.5 ns. (Used to terminate input signal and to time gate with respect to signal output.)
Gate and Busy Outputs
Gate output
200 mV pulse marks exact position of gate with respect to signal output. ±1 ns accuracy (50 Ω load)
Busy output
TTL signal indicates output data is ready. Stays high from trigger until unit is ready for next trigger. (45 µs min., longer for long delays or gate widths.) Drives 50 Ω load to 2 VDC.
General
Power supplies
+24V/135 mA, +12V/380 mA, -12V/230 mA, -24V/150 mA. 14 W. Power from a standard NIM crate (SR280).
Mechanical
Dual-width NIM enclosure
Dimensions
2.7" × 8.174" × 11.5" (WHL)