20 research outputs found
Characterisation of AMS H35 HV-CMOS monolithic active pixel sensor prototypes for HEP applications
Monolithic active pixel sensors produced in High Voltage CMOS (HV-CMOS)
technology are being considered for High Energy Physics applications due to the
ease of production and the reduced costs. Such technology is especially
appealing when large areas to be covered and material budget are concerned.
This is the case of the outermost pixel layers of the future ATLAS tracking
detector for the HL-LHC. For experiments at hadron colliders, radiation
hardness is a key requirement which is not fulfilled by standard CMOS sensor
designs that collect charge by diffusion. This issue has been addressed by
depleted active pixel sensors in which electronics are embedded into a large
deep implantation ensuring uniform charge collection by drift. Very first small
prototypes of hybrid depleted active pixel sensors have already shown a
radiation hardness compatible with the ATLAS requirements. Nevertheless, to
compete with the present hybrid solutions a further reduction in costs
achievable by a fully monolithic design is desirable. The H35DEMO is a large
electrode full reticle demonstrator chip produced in AMS 350 nm HV-CMOS
technology by the collaboration of Karlsruher Institut f\"ur Technologie (KIT),
Institut de F\'isica d'Altes Energies (IFAE), University of Liverpool and
University of Geneva. It includes two large monolithic pixel matrices which can
be operated standalone. One of these two matrices has been characterised at
beam test before and after irradiation with protons and neutrons. Results
demonstrated the feasibility of producing radiation hard large area fully
monolithic pixel sensors in HV-CMOS technology. H35DEMO chips with a substrate
resistivity of 200 cm irradiated with neutrons showed a radiation
hardness up to a fluence of ncm with a hit efficiency of
about 99% and a noise occupancy lower than hits in a LHC bunch
crossing of 25ns at 150V
POREZ NA DOHODAK U REPUBLICI HRVATSKOJ
Ovaj Älanak obraÄuje porez na dohodak kao neposredni (izravni) porez
u poreznom sustavu Republike Hrvatske kojim su obuhvaÄeni fiziÄke osobe, obveznici
poreza na dohodak. Definiranje i pojaĆĄnjenje vrste dohodaka s obzirom na izvor dohotka
i to: dohodak od nesamostalnog rada, dohodak od samostalne djelatnosti, dohodak od
imovine i imovinskih prava, dohodak od kapitala, dohodak od osiguranja, drugi dohodak,
te metodologija utvrÄivanja porezne obveze i poreznih stopa i utvrÄivanje poreznog
razdoblja.
Navedeni su primici koji se ne smatraju dohotkom, ĆĄto je to porezni gubitak te osobni
odbitak kao neoporezivi dio dohotka
Testbeam results of irradiated ams H18 HV-CMOS pixel sensor prototypes
HV-CMOS pixel sensors are a promising option for the tracker upgrade of the ATLAS experiment at the LHC, as well as for other future tracking applications in which large areas are to be instrumented with radiation-tolerant silicon pixel sensors. We present results of testbeam characterisations of the 4th generation of Capacitively Coupled Pixel Detectors (CCPDv4) produced with the ams H18 HV-CMOS process that have been irradiated with different particles (reactor neutrons and 18 MeV protons) to fluences between 1Ă 1014 and 5Ă 1015 1âMeVâ neq. The sensors were glued to ATLAS FE-I4 pixel readout chips and measured at the CERN SPS H8 beamline using the FE-I4 beam telescope. Results for all fluences are very encouraging with all hit efficiencies being better than 97% for bias voltages of 85 V. The sample irradiated to a fluence of 1Ă 1015 neqâa relevant value for a large volume of the upgraded trackerâexhibited 99.7% average hit efficiency. The results give strong evidence for the radiation tolerance of HV-CMOS sensors and their suitability as sensors for the experimental HL-LHC upgrades and future large-area silicon-based tracking detectors in high-radiation environments
Results of the 2015 testbeam of a 180 nm AMS High-Voltage CMOS sensor prototype
Active pixel sensors based on the High-Voltage CMOS technology are being investigated as a viable option for the future pixel tracker of the ATLAS experiment at the High-Luminosity LHC. This paper reports on the testbeam measurements performed at the H8 beamline of the CERN Super Proton Synchrotron on a High-Voltage CMOS sensor prototype produced in 180 nm AMS technology. Results in terms of tracking efficiency and timing performance, for different threshold and bias conditions, are shown
Test beam measurement of ams H35 HV-CMOS capacitively coupled pixel sensor prototypes with high-resistivity substrate
In the context of the studies of the ATLAS High Luminosity LHC programme, radiation tolerant pixel detectors in CMOS technologies are investigated. To evaluate the effects of substrate resistivity on CMOS sensor performance, the H35DEMO demonstrator, containing different diode and amplifier designs, was produced in ams H35 HV-CMOS technology using four different substrate resistivities spanning from 80-1000 ohm cm. A glueing process using a high-precision flip-chip machine was developed in order to capacitively couple the sensors to FE-I4 Readout ASIC using a thin layer of epoxy glue with good uniformity over a large surface. The resulting assemblies were measured in beam test at the Fermilab Test Beam Facilities with 120 GeV protons and CERN SPS H8 beamline using 180 GeV pions. The in-time efficiency and tracking properties measured for the different sensor types are shown to be compatible with the ATLAS ITk requirements for its pixel sensors
A data acquisition system for HV-CMOS sensor research and development in the upgrade of ATLAS experiment
In the high luminosity Large Hadron Collider upgrade of the A Toroidal LHC ApparatuS (ATLAS) experiment in 2026, the new inner tracker detector will be installed. As a promising candidate for the outer layer of the inner tracker detector, the High Voltage CMOS (HV-CMOS) pixel sensors are being investigated by the ATLAS collaboration. A Front-End LInk eXchange (FELIX) based Data Acquisition (DAQ) system is developed for the R&D; of the HV-CMOS sensors. A FELIX card with a Peripheral Component Interconnect express interface in the back-end is used to control, monitor, calibrate, and read out the front-end electronics. In the front-end, a Xilinx evaluation board ZC706 works as the interface between the back-end and the custom boards with HV-CMOS sensors and the readout Application-Specific Integrated Circuit. The DAQ system was successfully deployed for the testbeam experiment at CERN. The design of the DAQ system, the tuning of sensors, and the testbeam results will be described in details
Characterisation of novel prototypes of monolithic HV-CMOS pixel detectors for high energy physics experiments
An upgrade of the ATLAS experiment for the High Luminosity phase of LHC is
planned for 2024 and foresees the replacement of the present Inner Detector
(ID) with a new Inner Tracker (ITk) completely made of silicon devices.
Depleted active pixel sensors built with the High Voltage CMOS (HV-CMOS)
technology are investigated as an option to cover large areas in the outermost
layers of the pixel detector and are especially interesting for the development
of monolithic devices which will reduce the production costs and the material
budget with respect to the present hybrid assemblies. For this purpose the
H35DEMO, a large area HV-CMOS demonstrator chip, was designed by KIT, IFAE and
University of Liverpool, and produced in AMS 350 nm CMOS technology. It
consists of four pixel matrices and additional test structures. Two of the
matrices include amplifiers and discriminator stages and are thus designed to
be operated as monolithic detectors. In these devices the signal is mainly
produced by charge drift in a small depleted volume obtained by applying a bias
voltage of the order of 100 V. Moreover, to enhance the radiation hardness of
the chip, this technology allows to enclose the electronics in the same deep
N-WELLs which are also used as collecting electrodes. In this contribution the
characterisation of H35DEMO chips and results of the very first beam test
measurements of the monolithic CMOS matrices with high energetic pions at CERN
SPS will be presented.Comment: in proceedings of INSTR17, Novosibirsk, Russia, February 27 - March
3, 2017, submitted to JINS