1 research outputs found
A novel concept for a fully digital particle detector
Silicon sensors are the most diffuse position sensitive device in particle
physics 8 experiments and in countless applications in science and technology.
They had a spectacular progress in performance over almost 40 years since their
first introduction, but their evolution is now slowing down. The position
resolution for single particle hits is larger than a few microns in the most
advanced sensors. This value was reached already over 30 years ago [1]. The
minimum ionising path length a sensor can detect is several tens of microns.
There are fundamental reasons why these limits will not be substantially
improved by further refinements of the current technology. This makes silicon
sensors unsuitable to applications where the physics signature is the short
path of a recoiling atom and constrains the layout of physics experiments where
they represent by far the best option like high energy physics collider
experiments. In perspective, the availability of sensors with sub-micron
spatial resolution, in the order of a few tens of nanometres, would be a
disruptive change for the sensor technology with a foreseeable huge impact on
experiment layout and various applications of these devices. For providing such
a leap in resolution, we propose a novel design based on a purely digital
circuit. This disruptive concept potentially enables pixel sizes much smaller
than 1{\mu}m2 and a number of advantages in terms of power consumption, readout
speed and reduced thickness (for low mass sensors).Comment: 12 pages, 12 figures, 10 reference