Graphene's linear bandstructure and two-dimensional density of states provide
an implicit advantage for sensing charge. Here, these advantages are leveraged
in a deeply depleted graphene-oxide-semiconductor (D2GOS) junction detector
architecture to sense carriers created by ionizing radiation. Specifically, the
room temperature response of the silicon-based D2GOS junction is analyzed
during irradiation with 20 MeV Si4+ ions. Detection was demonstrated for doses
ranging from 12-1200 ions with device functionality maintained with no
substantive degradation. To understand the device response, D2GOS pixels were
characterized post-irradiation via a combination of electrical
characterization, Raman spectroscopy, and photocurrent mapping. This combined
characterization methodology underscores the lack of discernible damage caused
by irradiation to the graphene while highlighting the nature of interactions
between the incident ions and the silicon absorber.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figure