760 research outputs found
Design and standalone characterisation of a capacitively coupled HV-CMOS sensor chip for the CLIC vertex detector
The concept of capacitive coupling between sensors and readout chips is under
study for the vertex detector at the proposed high-energy CLIC electron
positron collider. The CLICpix Capacitively Coupled Pixel Detector (C3PD) is an
active High-Voltage CMOS sensor, designed to be capacitively coupled to the
CLICpix2 readout chip. The chip is implemented in a commercial nm HV-CMOS
process and contains a matrix of square pixels with m
pitch. First prototypes have been produced with a standard resistivity of
cm for the substrate and tested in standalone mode. The
results show a rise time of ns, charge gain of mV/ke and
e RMS noise for a power consumption of W/pixel. The
main design aspects, as well as standalone measurement results, are presented.Comment: 13 pages, 13 figures, 2 tables. Work carried out in the framework of
the CLICdp collaboratio
Piecewise uniform switched vector quantization of the memoryless two-dimensional Laplace source
A simple and complete asymptotical analysis of an optimal piecewise uniform quantization of two-dimensional memoryless Laplacian source with the respect to distortion (D) i.e. the mean-square error (MSE) is presented. Piecewise uniform quantization consists of L different uniform vector quan-tizers. Uniform quantizer optimality conditions and all main equations for optimal number of output points and levels for each partition are presented (using rectangular cells). The optimal granular distortion (i) for each partition in a closed form is derived. Switched quantization is used in order to give higher quality by increasing signal-to-quantization noise ratio (SQNR) in a wide range of signal volumes (variances) or to decrease necessary sample rate
On Majorization for Matrices
In this paper, we give several results for majorized matrices by using continuous convex function and Green function. We obtain mean value theorems for majorized matrices and also give corresponding Cauchy means, as well as prove that these means are monotonic. We prove positive semi-definiteness of matrices generated by differences deduced from majorized matrices which implies exponential convexity and log-convexity of these differences and also obtain Lypunov's and Dresher's type inequalities for these differences
Prototyping of an HV-CMOS demonstrator for the High Luminosity-LHC upgrade
HV-CMOS sensors can offer important advantages in terms of material budget, granularity and cost for large area tracking systems in high energy physics experiments. This article presents the design and simulated results of an HV-CMOS pixel demonstrator for the High Luminosity-LHC. The pixel demonstrator has been designed in the 0.35 μm HV-CMOS process from ams AG and submitted for fabrication through an engineering run. To improve the response of the sensor, different wafers with moderate to high substrate resistivities are used to fabricate the design. The prototype consists of four large analog and standalone matrices with several pixel flavours, which are all compatible for readout with the FE-I4 ASIC. Details about the matrices and the pixel flavours are provided in this article
Status of a DEPFET pixel system for the ILC vertex detector
We have developed a prototype system for the ILC vertex detector based on
DEPFET pixels. The system operates a 128x64 matrix (with ~35x25 square micron
large pixels) and uses two dedicated microchips, the SWITCHER II chip for
matrix steering and the CURO II chip for readout. The system development has
been driven by the final ILC requirements which above all demand a detector
thinned to 50 micron and a row wise read out with line rates of 20MHz and more.
The targeted noise performance for the DEPFET technology is in the range of
ENC=100 e-. The functionality of the system has been demonstrated using
different radioactive sources in an energy range from 6 to 40keV. In recent
test beam experiments using 6GeV electrons, a signal-to-noise ratio of S/N~120
has been achieved with present sensors being 450 micron thick. For improved
DEPFET systems using 50 micron thin sensors in future, a signal-to-noise of 40
is expected.Comment: Invited poster at the International Symposium on the Development of
Detectors for Particle, AstroParticle and Synchrotron Radiation Experiments,
Stanford CA (SNIC06) 6 pages, 12 eps figure
Developing the future of gamma-ray astrophysics with monolithic silicon pixels
This paper explores the potential of AstroPix, a project to develop Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor (CMOS) pixels for the next generation of space-based high-energy astrophysics experiments. Multimessenger astrophysics is a rapidly developing field whose upcoming missions need support from new detector technology such as AstroPix. ATLASPix, a monolithic silicon detector optimized for the ATLAS particle detector at CERN, is the beginning of the larger AstroPix project. Energy resolution is a driving parameter in the reconstruction of gamma-ray events, and therefore the characterization of ATLASPix energy resolution is the focus of this paper. The intrinsic energy resolution of the detector exceeded our baseline requirements of <10% at 60 keV. The digital output of ATLASPix results in energy resolutions insufficient to advance gamma-ray astronomy. However, the results from the intrinsic energy resolution indicate the digital capability of the detector can be redesigned, and the next generation of pixels for the larger AstroPix project have already been constructed. Iterations of AstroPix-type pixels are an exciting new technology candidate to support new space-based missions
AstroPix: investigating the potential of silicon pixel sensors in the future of gamma-ray astrophysics
This paper details preliminary photon measurements with the monolithic silicon detector ATLASPix, a pixel detector built and optimized for the CERN experiment ATLAS. The goal of this paper is to determine the promise of pixelated silicon in future space-based gamma-ray experiments. With this goal in mind, radioactive photon sources were used to determine the energy resolution and detector response of ATLASPix; these are novel measurements for ATLASPix, a detector built for a ground-based particle accelerator. As part of this project a new iteration of monolithic Si pixels, named AstroPix, have been created based on ATLASPix, and the eventual goal is to further optimize AstroPix for gamma-ray detection by constructing a prototype Compton telescope.The energy resolution of both the digital and analog output of ATLASPix is the focus of this paper, as it is a critical metric for Compton telescopes. It was found that with the analog output of the detector, the energyresolution of a single pixel was 7.69 +/- 0.13% at 5.89 keV and 7.27 +/- 1.18% at 30.1 keV, which exceeds the conservative baseline requirements of 10% resolution at 60 keV and is an encouraging start to an optimistic goal of<2% resolution at 60 keV. The digital output of the entire detector consistently yielded energy resolutions that exceeded 100% for different sources. The analog output of the monolithic silicon pixels indicates that thisis a promising technology for future gamma-ray missions, while the analysis of the digital output points to the need for a redesign of future photon-sensitive monolithic silicon pixel detectors
CIX - A Detector for Spectral Enhanced X-ray Imaging by Simultaneous Counting and Integrating
A hybrid pixel detector based on the concept of simultaneous charge
integration and photon counting will be presented. The second generation of a
counting and integrating X-ray prototype CMOS chip (CIX) has been operated with
different direct converting sensor materials (CdZnTe and CdTe) bump bonded to
its 8x8 pixel matrix. Photon counting devices give excellent results for low to
medium X-ray fluxes but saturate at high rates while charge integration allows
the detection of very high fluxes but is limited at low rates by the finite
signal to noise ratio. The combination of both signal processing concepts
therefore extends the resolvable dynamic range of the X-ray detector. In
addition, for a large region of the dynamic range, where counter and integrator
operate simultaneously, the mean energy of the detected X-ray spectrum can be
calculated. This spectral information can be used to enhance the contrast of
the X-ray image. The advantages of the counting and integrating signal
processing concept and the performance of the imaging system will be reviewed.
The properties of the system with respect to dynamic range and sensor response
will be discussed and examples of imaging with additional spectral information
will be presented.Comment: 12 pages, 14 figures, SPIE Medical Imaging Conference, San Diego,
200
The New Generation of the KIT 3D USCT
The first clinical studies with our current prototype, 3D USCT II, enabled us to identify the necessary improvements for transition of our method to clinical practice. The main goals are to improve the contrast of reflection and transmission tomography, and to optimize the coverage of the imaged breast by a new geometry of the transducer distribution. Furthermore, for cost-effective industrial mass production, a self-calibration method allows us to relax the precision of the positioning of the transducers to 0.1 mm. The readout of the transducer arrays is now carried out by an ASIC, developed for a more cost-effective design. The coupling of the measuring device to the patient was optimized to cover the full size of the breast up to the pectoral muscles. Finally, the data acquisition and readout time were reduced to 1.5 minutes each by new micro-TCA electronics and larger FPGAs
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