ViewVC Help
View File | Revision Log | Show Annotations | Root Listing
root/cvsroot/UserCode/TIBTIDNotes/TIBTIDIntNote/IntegrationProcedures.tex
Revision: 1.5
Committed: Mon Apr 27 14:27:03 2009 UTC (16 years ago) by carlo
Content type: application/x-tex
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.4: +31 -26 lines
Log Message:
*** empty log message ***

File Contents

# User Rev Content
1 sguazz 1.1 \section{Integration Procedures}
2     \label{sec:Procedures}
3 sguazz 1.4 TIB and TID have different integration procedures, each one being optimised
4     for the geometry and the best installation and test logical sequence.
5     In this section the steps done to assembly a TIB shell and a TID
6 carlo 1.5 ring will be described also mentioning the tests performed in between and
7 sguazz 1.4 described in detail in section~\ref{sec:Tests}.
8    
9     The integration process starts from the basic mechanical structure
10     already equipped with cooling pipes and the module support ledges
11     and fully qualified with respect to the precision mounting of the
12     mechanical parts and cooling performances.
13 lino 1.2
14     \subsection{TIB Integration Procedures}
15    
16 carlo 1.5 The shell is fixed, with the cylinder axis horizontal, onto an
17     integration bench using an aluminum frame to minimize the mechanical
18     stresses applied to the carbon fibre mechanical structure.
19     The bench allows the shell to be rotated around the cylinder
20 sguazz 1.4 axis and is also know as ``roaster''. All the internal and external strings can be
21     positioned in an optimal way for access in a fast, practical and safe way.
22    
23     The shell supporting structure also holds a system consisting of plastic
24     trays to safely arrange the AOH fibres. To easily identify each string a bar code is temporarily stick on the
25     structure.\\
26     %The string sticker is read and send to the integration database interface program
27     %before each mounting operation.\\
28 lino 1.2 A picture of a Layer 4 mechanical structure mounted on the integration bench is shown in Fig.~\ref{fig:bench}.
29 sguazz 1.1
30     \begin{figure}[!htb]
31     \begin{center}
32     \includegraphics[width=0.85\textwidth]{Figs/bench.pdf}
33     \end{center}
34     \caption{A shell carbon fiber structure mounted on the integration bench. The cooling pipes
35     and ledges of inner part of the shell are visible.}
36     \label{fig:bench} % Give a unique label
37     \end{figure}
38    
39    
40    
41 sguazz 1.4 \subsubsection{AOH Installation}
42 sguazz 1.1 The small AOH board ($3\times 2.2 cm^2$)
43 carlo 1.5 is screwed to a C-shaped ledge which is directly glued on the string cooling
44 sguazz 1.4 pipes. Due to mechanical constraints, the
45     fibers and their connectors should be carefully routed to the outside of the shell through a
46 sguazz 1.1 number of ledges, holes and pipes keeping
47     them as close as possible to the carbon fiber structure surface to which they are finally fixed
48 sguazz 1.4 using glued kapton strips. The main part of the pig-tail fibers
49     remains out of the shell and is temporary stored in the plastic
50     trays. The optical connectors are inserted
51     into arrays of dummy optical plugs fixed at the far-end of the
52     structure to be always accessible during the various tests which
53     require many connect-disconnect operations.\\
54    
55     Since the optical fibers are quite fragile, special protections have
56     been arranged in the most critical points.
57 carlo 1.5 For example at the shell flange the fibers have to be bent by $90^\circ$ and
58     routed together with other services towards the service cylinder.
59     In this particular region the fibres are grouped together and
60     covered by a silicon rubber spiral (see
61 sguazz 1.4 Fig.~\ref{fig:spiraline}).
62    
63     The procedure resulted to be very effective: only few fibres out of
64 carlo 1.5 a total of 9192 were found broken at the end of TIB/TID integration.
65 sguazz 1.4
66 lino 1.2 A layer 2 shell with AOH mounted on is shown in Fig.~\ref{fig:aoh}.
67 sguazz 1.1
68 sguazz 1.4
69    
70 sguazz 1.1 \begin{figure}[!htb]
71     \begin{center}
72     \includegraphics[width=0.60\textwidth]{Figs/aoh.pdf}
73     \end{center}
74     \caption{A layer 2 shell with AOH mounted. The optical fiber pig-tails are also visible.}
75     \label{fig:aoh} % Give a unique label
76     \end{figure}
77    
78     \begin{figure}[!htb]
79     \begin{center}
80     \includegraphics[width=0.60\textwidth]{Figs/spiraline2.pdf}
81     \end{center}
82     \caption{Group of optical fibers protected by siliconic ruber spirals at the flange exit.}
83     \label{fig:spiraline} % Give a unique label
84     \end{figure}
85    
86 sguazz 1.4 Since the AOH is powered by the module kapton tail its test without
87 carlo 1.5 the corresponding module is not straightforward requiring a temporary
88     connector inserted into the fragile AOH plug. For this reason it has been choosen
89     not to test AOHs immediatly after their installation, despite the
90 sguazz 1.4 operation of changing a broken AOH when the modules are already
91 carlo 1.5 installed is very difficult and somehow risky for the nearby objects
92 sguazz 1.4 already mounted. Eventually, the number of AOH that had to be replaced
93     was anyway very small, at the level of one per shell/disk.
94 sguazz 1.1
95 lino 1.3 \subsubsection{Mother Cable Installation}
96 carlo 1.5 The Mother Cables were put in place after the AOH
97     mounting and when all optical fibers have been fixed to the shell and
98     adequately protected. The mother cables are inserted below
99 sguazz 1.4 the ledges by sliding them on
100 carlo 1.5 the shell surface from the flange. The ledges support keep the
101     mother cable in place (see~\ref{fig:l3detail}). This procedure is in some cases
102     complicated by mechanical
103     constraints at the level of the shell front flange
104     and cooling manifolds. After the Mother Cables have been inserted they
105     are connected to the power cables (medusa cables) which are temporary
106     fixed to the shell supporting frame. \\
107     The {\em medusa cable} is a bundle of single insulated copper wires with
108     no definited envelope and geometry. This helps in efficiently
109     use the very limited available space on the TIB front flange during the
110     seervice routing.\\
111 sguazz 1.4 % allowing
112     %to 'distribute' the cable among the other services. \\
113     To ease the implementation of the control ring redundancy, CCUs are
114 carlo 1.5 put in the ring with a pre-defined hardware address order. So, for each
115 sguazz 1.4 string position in the ring, care must be taken to choose the proper mother cable,
116 carlo 1.5 that comes with the correct address CCUM already on it.
117 sguazz 1.4 %, has to be provided with a
118     %CCU whose address is in a fixed order with respect to its position in
119     %the token ring.
120     \begin{figure}[!htb]
121     \begin{center}
122     \includegraphics[width=0.60\textwidth]{Figs/mc_detail_full.png}
123     \end{center}
124     \caption{A symplified detail of the $r\phi$ section of TIB L3
125     mechanical drawing.}
126     \label{fig:l3detail} % Give a unique label
127     \end{figure}
128    
129 sguazz 1.1
130 lino 1.2 \subsubsection{Module Mounting}\label{sect:tibmodules}
131 sguazz 1.4 Both single modules and double sided module assemblies are mounted on the shell by hand.
132     The module is supported below the front-end
133     hybrid and on the opposite side by two ledges support that precisely
134     define the module position and act as heat sink
135     %for the front-end hybrid and the sensor generated power
136     being in contact with the cooling pipes.
137     The shape of the ledges is different for the single sided modules and
138     for the double-sided module assemblies. In the latter case the
139     ``stereo'' module sits on the structure upside-down and the ledge
140     below the hybrid has a milled slot to ensure enough room to the
141     front-end hybrid. The ledge on the opposite side has two different
142     shapes reflecting the two orientations of the ``stereo'' modules.
143     Each ledge has two M1 threaded holes. One is concentric with a 2mm
144     diameter socket.
145     The module features one precision pin on both short sides that fits
146     into the socket (Fig. \ref{fig:insets} c). The milling of the socket and the glueing of the
147     ledge onto the shell is done by using the same reference, i.e. the
148     ledge edges, so to ensure an accurate positioning.
149     The module pin at the hybrid side is glued onto the module frame. The
150     one at the opposite side, however, fits into an 'U'-shaped
151     slot a design that allows for movements along the module long side. In
152     a device that will be affected to huge temperature changes, this is an
153     essential feature to compensate for thermal variations while ensuring
154     mechanical precision.
155    
156     Before mounting a module on the shell the structure is rotated to place
157     the corresponding string in a confortable and horizontal
158     position. Then the module inventory database is queried for an
159     appropriate module. The answer depends on module type and availability
160     at the integration centre and on the module depletion
161 sguazz 1.1 voltage (see par.~\ref{sec:biasandvdepl}). \\
162 sguazz 1.4
163     The module identified for mounting then undergoes an optical
164     inspection to check for obvious damages and the temporary labels used
165     during the production are removed. Finally the module and ledges
166     contact surfaces are inspected and cleaned to ensure an optimal heat
167     exchange with the cooling circuit. The operations that imply the
168     handling of the modules are very delicate and account for
169     a considarable fraction of the time spent into module mounting.\\
170    
171     The single sided module or the double side modules assembly is mounted
172     on the structure by hand. It is first leaned onto the ledges and then is
173     gently slit until the pin at the hybrid side enters into the precision
174     socket. Now can only the rotation around the pin axis is possible.
175     The mounting is completed by inserting in the corresponding precision
176     socket the T-shaped aluminum pin placed in the U-shaped slot
177     (Fig. \ref{fig:insets} b) located on the frame short side opposite to
178     the hybrid. The module is finally tighetned by the four M1 screws by
179     using a limited-torque screw driver.
180 sguazz 1.1
181     \begin{figure}[tbh]
182     \centering
183     \includegraphics[width=.7\textwidth]{Figs/collage.pdf}
184     \caption{TIB single-sided module insets:
185 sguazz 1.4 \textbf{a:} The U-shaped slot glued on the carbon fiber module frame;
186     \textbf{b:} the T-shaped pin inserted in the slot (seen from below);
187 sguazz 1.1 \textbf{c:} front-end hybrid side precision insertion pin (seen from below).}
188     \label{fig:insets}
189     \end{figure}
190    
191 sguazz 1.4 The clearance between the module most fragile parts (bondings)
192     and the other surrounding structures when the operation is performed (cooling pipes and ledges of the
193 sguazz 1.1 adjacent strings and modules already mounted) are, in case of single-sided modules,
194 sguazz 1.4 sufficiently large for a safe operation. For the double-sided module
195     assemblies the cleareances are much reduced, of the order or less than a millimeter.
196     In this case, to ease the mounting, a simple mechanical guidance
197     template has been designed to further reduce the risk of possible
198     accidental damage of the microbonds or the sensor.
199    
200     Once a module or a double sided assembly is mounted its basic
201     functionality is tested by feeding low voltages and checking I$^2$C
202     communications with the various devices present on the hybrid, the CCU
203     on the mother cable and the AOH. This also allows the module identity
204     to be certified by using the DCU hardware ID.
205     Once a string of three or six modules is completed the I$^2$C
206     communications are checked again and a pedestal and noise run is taken
207     with a HV bias at 400V. For the tests complete description see
208     section~\ref{sec:Tests}.
209 sguazz 1.1
210 lino 1.3 \subsubsection{Control Ring Installation}
211 sguazz 1.4 The control electronics that supervises the control ring, i.e. the
212     DOHM boards and in case the AUXs, are located on a carbon fiber skin
213     are mounted on the shell external surface just above the modules by carbon fiber pillars and aluminum supports (Fig. \ref{fig:dohm}).
214     A thin aluminum foil has been glued on the skin and electrically grounded
215 sguazz 1.1 to reduce possible interference between the logical control signals and
216 sguazz 1.4 the module analog electronics. All mother cables are then connected to
217     the DOHM (and AUX) ports by using a set of appropriately terminated
218     flat-cables that have been preprared before, on the empty structure,
219     by using dummy replicas of the DOHS/AUX boards and mother cables.
220    
221     Each shell needs of three to six Control Rings, generally
222     differing also withinh the same shell with respect to the number of
223     served strings and the geographical distribution of these strings
224     into the shell.
225     For example, Layer 1 and 2, which are equipped with
226     double sided modules, have control rings of 3 to 5
227     strings, while Layer three and four have 13 to 15 single sided strings.\\
228     \begin{figure}[!htb]
229     \begin{center}
230     \includegraphics[width=0.60\textwidth]{Figs/dohm.pdf}
231     \end{center}
232     \caption{A Layer 3 control ring circuitry during the cable preparation
233     witha DOHM and an AUX (the smaller board) with control ring cables
234     connected the mother cable heads (not visible).}
235     \label{fig:dohm} % Give a unique label
236 sguazz 1.1 \end{figure}
237    
238 sguazz 1.4 As can be seen in Fig.~\ref{fig:dohm}, due to the variable number of strings connected and their
239     different positions with respect to the support
240     mechanics and cooling, each control cable have a different length and shape and
241     should be tailored in-situ to minimize the path satisfying all the mechanical constraints.
242     Each control cable path has been optimized as a consequence of the
243     very limited room available for services.
244     For layer three and four the part of the control cables
245     which is not protected by the carbon fiber plate
246     is shielded using a thin Aluminum foil.\\
247     The $4 \times 2$ optical fibers, which connect the two DOH to the FEC,
248     are cerefully routed and protected at the flange. In fact the
249     redundancy architecture allows the ring to work also if the connection
250     to the master DOH fails, but the price to pay if both DOH connections
251     fail is of the order of 1-2\% of the entire TIB.\\
252     The DOHM cabling is completed by the power cable, very similar to the
253     mother cable 'medusas', and by the wiring of two PT1000 temperature
254     probes per control ring that comes already glued on the cooling manifolds.
255     The four probe wires are in fact routed through the DOHM via the Control
256     Ring power cable up to the power supply racks where the interlock
257     boards are also located. The four-wire resistance measurement
258     of the PT1000 is necessary to avoid the contribution of the
259     40 meter long power cable.
260     Also a humidity meter is hosted on the DOHM board; it is read out
261     through dedicated wires on the Control Ring power cable.
262    
263     A thinner carbon fiber skin is used as a protecting cover. Electrical
264     shielding is ensured by an aluminum foil glued to the cover and
265     grounded (Fig. \ref{fig:dohml1}). Finally the control ring is tested (see section \ref{sec:Tests}).\\ .
266 sguazz 1.1
267     \begin{figure}[tbh]
268     \centering
269     \includegraphics[width=.7\textwidth]{Figs/L1DOHM.pdf}
270     \caption{A Layer 1 completed with its control rings. The DOHM and cable area is covered with
271     aa aluminum shielded carbon fiber plate.}
272     \label{fig:dohml1}
273     \end{figure}
274    
275    
276 lino 1.2 \subsection{TID Integration }
277     The integration of the TID rings has required the design of a handling tool that
278     allows safe and easy manipulation of the mechanical structure, allows access and integration
279     on both side and provide support for the long optical fibers associated with the AOH and the DOH
280     of the DOHM. Moreover it should allow the assembly of rings into a full disk.
281    
282     The handling tool is based on a aluminum crow plate with different mounting positions for: ring
283     holding towers (4 to hold each ring) to adapt to any of the three different rings; U-shape
284     feets to allow the placing of the ring front side upwards or downwards; stocking cylinder where to
285     place and hold the long fibers; aligning jigs with pillar to allow to pair together two crowns
286     and join pairs of rings together to allow the assembly of ring into a disk. The handling tool will be called
287     in the following as {\it integration crown} and it is shown in Fig.~\ref{fig:ringbench} for different configuration:
288     for a R1, R3 rings on the front side and a R1 for both sides.
289    
290     The integration crown was made as light as possible, but rigid enough not to add mechanical stress to the
291     ring or the disk, during the manipulation, specially during rotation
292     of the structure (made manually using two handles) and the
293     assembly of rings into a disk. Weight????????
294    
295     \begin{figure}[!htb]
296     \begin{center}
297     % \includegraphics[width=0.49\textwidth]{Figs/R1-front.pdf}
298     % \includegraphics[width=0.49\textwidth]{Figs/R2-front.pdf}
299     % \includegraphics[width=0.49\textwidth]{Figs/R1-back.pdf}
300     % \includegraphics[width=0.49\textwidth]{Figs/R3-front.pdf}
301    
302     \includegraphics[width=0.7\textwidth]{Figs/R1-front.pdf}
303     % \includegraphics[width=0.49\textwidth]{Figs/R2-front.pdf}
304     \includegraphics[width=0.7\textwidth]{Figs/R1-back.pdf}
305     % \includegraphics[width=0.49\textwidth]{Figs/R3-front.pdf}
306     \end{center}
307     \caption{ The TID integration crown holding R1 rings in front (top) and back (bottom) positions.}
308     \label{fig:ringbench} % Give a unique label
309     \end{figure}
310     Once a new ring structure arrived, it was mounted on an integration crown. In order to identify easily the mother cable positions
311     during the integration bar code stickers were temporarelly glued to the ring. The integration work was made
312     in parallel on several rings and disks at different steps of integration, therefore several integration crowns were used.
313    
314     TID cooling ledges for the AOH could arrived with a bending angle outside specification, due to manipulations
315     of the ring and some touching that do not compromise the mechanical integrity of the cooling pipe.
316     The clearance between parts in a disk is very small, in particular silicon sensors have a minimal distance of 2mm between
317     AOH cooling ledges between ring 3 and ring 1, therefore mechanical checks were made and adjustment applied if needed.
318    
319     \subsubsection{Services Installation }
320     The first step of integration was the installation of the services. For the TID a problem to be solved was the routing out of the optical fibers of the DOHs and AOHs: all fibers have to exit from the TID at specific positions relative to holes on Service Cylinder.
321     To do that, a set of AOHs associated to each mother cable was found, all fibers were prepared to form a unique bundle that
322     could be easily routed in the ring, holding together fibers using silicon rubber spirals. The same was done for pairs of DOHs going to the same DOHM.
323    
324     All mother cables were prelimanarly tested in a dedicated test bench. The ring integration begin installing all four
325     mother cables on each side of the ring: they were placed and screwed to the ring and equipped with
326     CCU with the proper $I^2C$ address. The connector of the mother cables reach the outermost radius of the ring to allow the connection to the power cables.
327    
328     Then the DOHM was fixed: for R2 and R3 the addition of a cable was needed in order to allow power connection at the outer radius of the ring. The ground of the DOHM was connected to a cable to reach the outer ring radius and will be used to make a unique grounding line for all TID+/-. Then the DOHM was equipped with a proper CCU and with the needed two DOHs: their fiber were routed out properly and attached to integration crown via the stocking cylinder.
329    
330     The control ring cables that connect DOHM to the mother cables were pre-formed in advance and were mounted and adapted into the ring. A
331     complete functionality test of the control ring was then performed to verify that the main control ring and the redundancy were working
332     fine.
333    
334     Two temperature sensors PT1000 were finally glued to the cooling manifold and connected to the DOHM.
335    
336    
337     Details of the DOHM integration can be seen in the Fig.~ref{fig:tiddohms}.
338     \begin{figure}[!htb]
339     \begin{center}
340     \includegraphics[width=0.4\textwidth,angle=90]{Figs/dohm-r1.pdf}
341     \includegraphics[width=0.4\textwidth,angle=90]{Figs/dohm-r2.pdf}
342     \includegraphics[width=0.4\textwidth,angle=90]{Figs/dohm-r3.pdf}
343     \end{center}
344     \caption{Integration of DOHM in the TID rings, from left to right R1, R2 and R3.}
345     \label{fig:tiddohms} % Give a unique label
346     \end{figure}
347    
348    
349     Mounting of the AOH followed, screwing them temporarelly to the cooling ledge. The fiber lenght closes to the module was hold in place using foil of kapton properly shaped and glued to the ring. Then fiber bundle was routed up to the outmost ring radius at the position where the mother cables connectors are, and they are mechanical hold there by a kapton foil screwed to the ring: the remaining lenght was then fixed to the stocking cylinders. Some of these working solutions are in shown in Fig.~\ref{fig:tidfibers}. All
350    
351     \begin{figure}[!htb]
352     \begin{center}
353     \includegraphics[width=0.4\textwidth,angle=90]{Figs/Fiber-kapton1.pdf}
354     \includegraphics[width=0.4\textwidth,angle=90]{Figs/Fiber-kapton3.pdf}
355     \includegraphics[height=0.4\textwidth]{Figs/Fiber-kapton2.pdf}
356     \end{center}
357     \caption{Few examples of solutions found for routing, bind together and fix the AOH fibers in the rings.}
358     \label{fig:tidfibers} % Give a unique label
359     \end{figure}
360    
361     \subsubsection{Module Mounting }
362     The mounting of TID modules follow exactly the same procedure explained in the TIB section~\ref{sect:tibmodules}.
363     Module mounting in rings is easier than in shells, since modules with following azimuthal angle are placed in opposite sides
364     of the ring. Neverthelss a lot of care was still needed: the precision pin was often very tight and the
365     module cometa was placed on the U-shaped slot and hold down by the side precision insertion pin. Sistamatic
366     checks were made on the electrical connection of the module ground with the carbon fiber.
367    
368     Once a full mother cable was ready, several test as exaplined later in the paper. To perform the noise test,
369     the entire ring was darken and measurements were done, first without bias and then with bias up to 100V to check
370     good high voltage connection and that no evident physical damage was done to the silicon module.
371    
372    
373     \subsubsection{Assembly of rings into a disk }
374    
375     Integration crown equipped with alignment cylinder, also alignment ring pieces
376     put on place.
377    
378     Slow manual movement going down, rotating a pair of distance screws.
379    
380     Lot of care in last millimiter about fitting fixing holes between rings and about parallelism of rings
381     and critical point of very close parts. Then, unfix the top ring from the integration crown and
382     screwing down the rings.
383    
384     Passing fibers from one integration crown to the other one.
385    
386     Detaching the integration crown
387    
388     Disk assembly proceed for R1 on a R3, then R2 on R1-R3 structure.
389    
390    
391     \begin{figure}[!htb]
392     \begin{center}
393     \includegraphics[height=0.6\textwidth]{Figs/Disk-assembly.pdf}
394     \end{center}
395     \caption{Disk assembly.}
396     \label{fig:tidassembly} % Give a unique label
397     \end{figure}
398    
399    
400     \begin{figure}[!htb]
401     \begin{center}
402     \includegraphics[height=0.6\textwidth]{Figs/DISK.pdf}
403     \end{center}
404     \caption{Disk assembled.}
405     \label{fig:tidassembly} % Give a unique label
406     \end{figure}
407    
408    
409    
410    
411    
412 sguazz 1.1
413     \subsection{Integration Database}
414    
415     Each active element, cables included,
416     of the CMS experiment is identified by a bi-dimensional, radiation resistant,
417     bar code which is glued on the component itself redundantly coding a 14-digit number.
418     For the tracker the registered components are:
419     detector modules, AOHs, DOHMs, DOHs, CCUs, Mother Cables,
420     optical fibres and ribbons, power and control cables.
421     Using this code the object characteristics and the results of the tests previously performed
422     during the production phase, can be retrievied from
423     the Tracker construction database~\cite{ref:database}.
424     Of equal, or even more, importance are the component
425     mounting locations and the connections between them.
426     This information is stored on the integration database at integration time.
427     Moreover the integration database acts also as an inventory to locate the components among
428     the various integration centers managing the shipping procedures.
429     It also contains a subset of the test data of all the
430     devices and their functional status (good, broken, mounted, dismounted, etc...).\\
431     Along with module tests results also an important number is stored for each module:
432     the hardware identifier of the DCU chip
433     embedded with the module (or DcuHardId). This code can be retrieved during data acquisition,
434     allowing for an unambiguous identification of a module.\\
435     A TIB/TID specific key was defined to store the location of mounted devices (named Geographical
436     Identifier, or GeoId): it is a string
437     composed of numerical fields separated by dots, as described in Table~\ref{tab:geoids}.
438     Bar code stickers with the GeoId are glued on the mechanical structure
439     before the integration starts (Fig. \ref{fig:stickers}).
440    
441     \begin{figure}[t]
442     \centering
443     \includegraphics[width=.6\textwidth]{Figs/stickers.pdf}
444     \caption{An empty shell with the bar code stickers identifying the strings.}
445     \label{fig:stickers}
446     \end{figure}
447    
448     The first 7 numbers in a GeoId identify the string to which a device belongs, while the last
449     part of this code represents the physical location where the device is placed.
450    
451     \begin{table}[h!]
452     \begin{center}
453     \begin{tabular}{l|ccc}
454     & 1 & 2 & free value \\
455     \hline
456     a & TIB & TID & \\
457     b & Forward ($z>0$) & Backward ($z<0$) & \\
458     c & Up ($y>0$) & Down ($y<0$) & \\
459     d & & & Layer \# \\
460     e & Inner & Outer & \\
461     f & & & Manifold \# \\
462     g & & & String \# \\
463     \end{tabular}
464     \caption[smallcaption]
465     {A generic $a.b.c.d.e.f.g$ GeoId identifies a string and must be interpreted according
466     to this table. For example of GeoId 1.1.2.4.1.3.2 identifies the second string, of the
467     third manifold placed in the inner surface of the Layer 4 Down Forward TIB shell.}
468     \label{tab:geoids}
469     \end{center}
470     \end{table}
471    
472     %The first number identifies TIB (1) against TID (2),
473     %the second number marks the forward part (1) vs. the backward (2). Hence TIB and TID codes become
474     %different. For TIB the third number identifies the upper/lower shell (1,2) and the fourth is
475     %the layer index (1-4).
476     %The following numbers represent if a device is placed on the inner or outer surface of a shell,
477     %the cooling manifold a device belongs to and the string index insidethe same manifold.