4 research outputs found
Performance of the MALTA Telescope
MALTA is part of the Depleted Monolithic Active Pixel sensors designed in
Tower 180nm CMOS imaging technology. A custom telescope with six MALTA planes
has been developed for test beam campaigns at SPS, CERN, with the ability to
host several devices under test. The telescope system has a dedicated custom
readout, online monitoring integrated into DAQ with realtime hit map, time
distribution and event hit multiplicity. It hosts a dedicated fully
configurable trigger system enabling to trigger on coincidence between
telescope planes and timing reference from a scintillator. The excellent time
resolution performance allows for fast track reconstruction, due to the
possibility to retain a low hit multiplicity per event which reduces the
combinatorics. This paper reviews the architecture of the system and its
performance during the 2021 and 2022 test beam campaign at the SPS North Area
Recent results with radiation-tolerant TowerJazz 180 nm MALTA sensors
To achieve the physics goals of future colliders, it is necessary to develop novel, radiation-hard silicon sensors for their tracking detectors. We target the replacement of hybrid pixel detectors with Depleted Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors (DMAPS) that are radiation-hard, monolithic CMOS sensors. We have designed, manufactured and tested the MALTA series of sensors, which are DMAPS in the 180 nm TowerJazz CMOS imaging technology. MALTA have a pixel pitch well below current hybrid pixel detectors, high time resolution (<2 ns) and excellent charge collection efficiency across pixel geometries. These sensors have a total silicon thickness of between 50–300 m, implying reduced material budgets and multiple scattering rates for future detectors which utilize such technology. Furthermore, their monolithic design bypasses the costly stage of bump-bonding in hybrid sensors and can substantially reduce detector costs. This contribution presents the latest results from characterization studies of the MALTA2 sensors, including results demonstrating the radiation tolerance of these sensors
Recent results with radiation-tolerant TowerJazz 180 nm MALTA sensors
To achieve the physics goals of future colliders, it is necessary to develop novel, radiation-hard silicon sensors for their tracking detectors. We target the replacement of hybrid pixel detectors with Depleted Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors (DMAPS) that are radiation-hard, monolithic CMOS sensors. We have designed, manufactured and tested the MALTA series of sensors, which are DMAPS in the 180 nm TowerJazz CMOS imaging technology. MALTA have a pixel pitch well below current hybrid pixel detectors, high time resolution (<2ns) and excellent charge collection efficiency across pixel geometries. These sensors have a total silicon thickness of between 50–300 μm, implying reduced material budgets and multiple scattering rates for future detectors which utilise such technology. Furthermore, their monolithic design bypasses the costly stage of bump-bonding in hybrid sensors and can substantially reduce detector costs. This contribution presents the latest results from characterisation studies of the MALTA2 sensors, including results demonstrating the radiation tolerance of these sensors
Performance of the MALTA Telescope
MALTA is part of the Depleted Monolithic Active Pixel sensors designed in Tower 180nm CMOS imaging technology. A custom telescope with six MALTA planes has been developed for test beam campaigns at SPS, CERN, with the ability to host several devices under test. The telescope system has a dedicated custom readout, online monitoring integrated into DAQ with realtime hit map, time distribution and event hit multiplicity. It hosts a dedicated fully configurable trigger system enabling to trigger on coincidence between telescope planes and timing reference from a scintillator. The excellent time resolution performance allows for fast track reconstruction, due to the possibility to retain a low hit multiplicity per event which reduces the combinatorics. This paper reviews the architecture of the system and its performance during the 2021 and 2022 test beam campaign at the SPS North Area