28 research outputs found
Mapping The In-Plane Electric Field Inside Irradiated Diodes
A significant aspect of the Phase-II Upgrade of the ATLAS detector is the replacement of the current Inner Detector with the ATLAS Inner Tracker (ITk). The ATLAS ITk is an all-silicon detector consisting of a pixel tracker and a strip tracker. Sensors for the ITk strip tracker have been developed to withstand the high radiation environment in the ATLAS detector after the High Luminosity Upgrade of the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, which will significantly increase the rate of particle collisions and resulting particle tracks. During their operation in the ATLAS detector, sensors for the ITk strip tracker are expected to accumulate fluences up to 1.61015neq/cm2 (including a safety factor of 1.5), which will significantly affect their performance. One characteristic of interest for highly irradiated sensors is the shape and homogeneity of the electric field inside its active area. For the results presented here, diodes with edge structures similar to full size ATLAS sensors were irradiated up to fluences comparable to those in the ATLAS ITk strip tracker and their electric fields mapped using a micro-focused X-ray beam (beam diameter 23m2). This study shows the extension and shape of the electric field inside highly irradiated diodes over a range of applied bias voltages. Additionally, measurements of the outline of the depleted sensor areas allow a comparison of the measured leakage current for different fluences with expectations for the corresponding active areas
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Magnetic triggering — time-resolved characterisation of silicon strip modules in the presence of switching DC-DC converters
Modules for the ATLAS Inner Tracker (ITk) strip tracker include a DC-DC converter circuit glued directly to the silicon sensor which converts the 11 V supplied to the module to the 1.5 V required for the operation of the readout chips. The DC-DC converter unit, consisting of a copper solenoid and custom ASIC, is located directly above the silicon strip sensor and therefore needs to be shielded to protect the sensor from EMI noise created during the operation of the circuit. Despite dedicated shielding, consisting of an aluminium shield box with continuous solder seams encompassing the surface components and a copper layer in the PCB beneath it, module channels connected to sensor strips located beneath the converter circuit were found to show a noise increase. While the DC-DC converter unit causing the underlying EMI noise operates at a frequency of 2 MHz, module characterisation measurements for ITk strip tracker modules are typically performed asynchronously to the DC-DC switching and are therefore averaged over the full range of time bins with respect to the converter frequency. In order to investigate the time dependence of the noise injection relative to the DC-DC switching frequency, a dedicated setup to understand the time-resolved performance change in modules was developed. By using a magnetic field probe to measure the field leaking through the shield box and triggering on its rising edge, data taking could be synchronised with the DC-DC switching. This paper illustrates the concept and setup of such time-resolved performance measurements using magnetic triggering and presents results for the observed effects on signal and noise for ATLAS ITk strip modules from both laboratory and beam tests
Radiation Campaign of HPK Prototype LGAD sensors for the High-Granularity Timing Detector (HGTD)
We report on the results of a radiation campaign with neutrons and protons of
Low Gain Avalanche Detectors (LGAD) produced by Hamamatsu (HPK) as prototypes
for the High-Granularity Timing Detector (HGTD) in ATLAS. Sensors with an
active thickness of 50~m were irradiated in steps of roughly 2 up
to a fluence of . As a function of the
fluence, the collected charge and time resolution of the irradiated sensors
will be reported for operation at
Beam test results of a 16 ps timing system based on ultra-fast silicon detectors
In this paper we report on the timing resolution of the first production of
50 micro-meter thick Ultra-Fast Silicon Detectors (UFSD) as obtained in a beam
test with pions of 180 GeV/c momentum. UFSD are based on the Low-Gain Avalanche
Detectors (LGAD) design, employing n-on-p silicon sensors with internal charge
multiplication due to the presence of a thin, low-resistivity diffusion layer
below the junction. The UFSD used in this test belongs to the first production
of thin (50 {\mu}m) sensors, with an pad area of 1.4 mm2. The gain was measured
to vary between 5 and 70 depending on the bias voltage. The experimental setup
included three UFSD and a fast trigger consisting of a quartz bar readout by a
SiPM. The timing resolution, determined comparing the time of arrival of the
particle in one or more UFSD and the trigger counter, for single UFSD was
measured to be 35 ps for a bias voltage of 200 V, and 26 ps for a bias voltage
of 240 V, and for the combination of 3 UFSD to be 20 ps for a bias voltage of
200 V, and 15 ps for a bias voltage of 240 V.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, 1 table, Subm. to NIM
Experimental Study of Acceptor Removal in UFSD
The performance of the Ultra-Fast Silicon Detectors (UFSD) after irradiation
with neutrons and protons is compromised by the removal of acceptors in the
thin layer below the junction responsible for the gain. This effect is tested
both with C-V measurements of the doping concentration and with measurements of
charge collection using charged particles. We find a perfect linear correlation
between the bias voltage to deplete the gain layer determined with C-V and the
bias voltage to collect a defined charge, measured with charge collection. An
example for the usefulness of this correlation is presented.Comment: 14 pages, 10 Figs., Sumitted to HSTD12 Hiroshima 201
Measuring the border of the active area on silicon strip sensors
Silicon strip sensors for the ATLAS Inner Tracker (ITk) have been designed to provide reliable particle detection in the high-radiation environment of the High-Luminosity Large Hadron Collider. One important design criterion for their development is the minimization of inactive sensor areas, which affect the hermiticity of particle detection inside the detector. In previous measurements of ATLAS silicon strip sensors, the charge-collecting area of individual strip implants has been mapped and found to agree with the sensor strip pitch and strip length. For strip implants next to the sensor bias ring, the extent of their charge-collecting area towards the inactive sensor area was previously unknown, which limited the accuracy of both overall detector hermiticity estimates and the position resolution for particle detection at the sensor edge. Therefore, measurements were conducted to map the area of charge collection for sensor strips at the edge of the active sensor area using a micro-focused X-ray beam. This publication presents measurements showing the extent of charge collection in the edge strips of silicon strip sensors for two generations of ATLAS ITk strip sensor modules. The measurements confirmed that charge deposited in a strip implant that is neither connected nor grounded leads to capacitive coupling to the adjacent strip, where it is indistinguishable from a hit in that strip