Cargando…

Recent progress of the ATLAS Planar Pixel Sensor R&D Project

The foreseen luminosity upgrade for the LHC (a factor of 5-10 more in peak luminosity by 2021) poses serious constraints on the technology for the ATLAS tracker in this High Luminosity era (HL-LHC). In fact, such luminosity increase leads to increased occupancy and radiation damage of the tracking d...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Bomben, M.
Formato: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: Phys. Procedia 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.phpro.2012.02.436
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1489525
_version_ 1780926301533634560
author Bomben, M.
author_facet Bomben, M.
author_sort Bomben, M.
collection CERN
description The foreseen luminosity upgrade for the LHC (a factor of 5-10 more in peak luminosity by 2021) poses serious constraints on the technology for the ATLAS tracker in this High Luminosity era (HL-LHC). In fact, such luminosity increase leads to increased occupancy and radiation damage of the tracking detectors. To investigate the suitability of pixel sensors using the proven planar technology for the upgraded tracker, the ATLAS Planar Pixel Sensor R&D Project was established comprising 17 institutes and more than 80 scientists. Main areas of research are the performance of planar pixel sensors at highest fluences, the exploration of possibilities for cost reduction to enable the instrumentation of large areas, the achievement of slim or active edge designs to provide low geometric inefficiencies without the need for shingling of modules and the investigation of the operation of highly irradiated sensors at low thresholds to increase the efficiency. In the following I will present results from the group, concerning mainly irradiated-devices performance, together with studies for new sensors, including detailed simulations.
format info:eu-repo/semantics/article
id cern-1385816
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2011
publisher Phys. Procedia
record_format invenio
spelling cern-13858162023-03-14T19:47:53Z doi:10.1016/j.phpro.2012.02.436 http://cds.cern.ch/record/1489525 eng Bomben, M. Recent progress of the ATLAS Planar Pixel Sensor R&D Project Detectors and Experimental Techniques 6: Transnational access CERN 6.1: Access to CERN-Test-beams The foreseen luminosity upgrade for the LHC (a factor of 5-10 more in peak luminosity by 2021) poses serious constraints on the technology for the ATLAS tracker in this High Luminosity era (HL-LHC). In fact, such luminosity increase leads to increased occupancy and radiation damage of the tracking detectors. To investigate the suitability of pixel sensors using the proven planar technology for the upgraded tracker, the ATLAS Planar Pixel Sensor R&D Project was established comprising 17 institutes and more than 80 scientists. Main areas of research are the performance of planar pixel sensors at highest fluences, the exploration of possibilities for cost reduction to enable the instrumentation of large areas, the achievement of slim or active edge designs to provide low geometric inefficiencies without the need for shingling of modules and the investigation of the operation of highly irradiated sensors at low thresholds to increase the efficiency. In the following I will present results from the group, concerning mainly irradiated-devices performance, together with studies for new sensors, including detailed simulations. The foreseen luminosity upgrade for the LHC (a factor of 5-10 more in peak luminosity by 2021) poses serious constraints on the technology for the ATLAS tracker in this High Luminosity era (HL-LHC). In fact, such a luminosity increase leads to increased occupancy and radiation damage of the tracking detectors. To investigate the suitability of pixel sensors using the proven planar technology for the upgraded tracker, the ATLAS Planar Pixel Sensor R&D; Project was established comprising 17 institutes and more than 80 scientists. Main areas of research are the performance of planar pixel sensors at highest fluences, the exploration of possibilities for cost reduction to enable the instrumentation of large areas, the achievement of slim or active edge designs to provide low geometric inefficiencies without the need for shingling of modules and the investigation of the operation of highly irradiated sensors at low thresholds to increase the efficiency. In the following I will present results from the group, concerning mainly irradiated-devices performance, together with studies for new sensors, including detailed simulations. The foreseen luminosity upgrade for the LHC (a factor of 5-10 more in peak luminosity by 2021) poses serious constraints on the technology for the ATLAS tracker in this High Luminosity era (HL-LHC). In fact, such luminosity increase leads to increased occupancy and radiation damage of the tracking detectors. To investigate the suitability of pixel sensors using the proven planar technology for the upgraded tracker, the ATLAS Planar Pixel Sensor R Project was established comprising 17 institutes and more than 80 scientists. Main areas of research are the performance of planar pixel sensors at highest fluences, the exploration of possibilities for cost reduction to enable the instrumentation of large areas, the achievement of slim or active edge designs to provide low geometric inefficiencies without the need for shingling of modules and the investigation of the operation of highly irradiated sensors at low thresholds to increase the efficiency. In the following I will present results from the group, concerning mainly irradiated-devices performance, together with studies for new sensors, including detailed simulations. info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/FP7/262025 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Education Level info:eu-repo/semantics/article http://cds.cern.ch/record/1489525 Phys. Procedia Phys. Procedia, (2012) pp. 940-949 2011-09-28
spellingShingle Detectors and Experimental Techniques
6: Transnational access CERN
6.1: Access to CERN-Test-beams
Bomben, M.
Recent progress of the ATLAS Planar Pixel Sensor R&D Project
title Recent progress of the ATLAS Planar Pixel Sensor R&D Project
title_full Recent progress of the ATLAS Planar Pixel Sensor R&D Project
title_fullStr Recent progress of the ATLAS Planar Pixel Sensor R&D Project
title_full_unstemmed Recent progress of the ATLAS Planar Pixel Sensor R&D Project
title_short Recent progress of the ATLAS Planar Pixel Sensor R&D Project
title_sort recent progress of the atlas planar pixel sensor r&d project
topic Detectors and Experimental Techniques
6: Transnational access CERN
6.1: Access to CERN-Test-beams
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.phpro.2012.02.436
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1489525
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1489525
work_keys_str_mv AT bombenm recentprogressoftheatlasplanarpixelsensorrdproject