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Measurements of low gain diodes using Transient Current Technique

Thin silicon sensors are under investigation for the LHC upgrade (High Luminosity LHC) next decade. Thin sensors have better momentum resolution than thick ones due to reduced multiple scattering. Having a thin sensor with built-in amplification allows, in addition, to reduce the thickness without s...

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Autor principal: Sekihata, Daiki
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/1596244
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author Sekihata, Daiki
author_facet Sekihata, Daiki
author_sort Sekihata, Daiki
collection CERN
description Thin silicon sensors are under investigation for the LHC upgrade (High Luminosity LHC) next decade. Thin sensors have better momentum resolution than thick ones due to reduced multiple scattering. Having a thin sensor with built-in amplification allows, in addition, to reduce the thickness without significant signal loss. These diodes have a built-in amplification layer that allows to obtain a higher signal than that of a standard diode of the same thickness. Two different techniques were employed to characterize them. Measurements of capacitance and leakage current versus bias voltage to extract the depletion voltage, and Transient Current Technique (TCT) to calculate the absolute gain of the device. Red laser is used for TCT to determine properties of charge carrier's motion. The gain of four samples is calculated with a method we call "kink method" which uses the ratio of charge induced by holes to charge induced by electrons. We also used a second method based on comparing the collected charge with a reference diode.
id cern-1596244
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2013
record_format invenio
spelling cern-15962442019-09-30T06:29:59Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1596244engSekihata, DaikiMeasurements of low gain diodes using Transient Current TechniqueDetectors and Experimental TechniquesThin silicon sensors are under investigation for the LHC upgrade (High Luminosity LHC) next decade. Thin sensors have better momentum resolution than thick ones due to reduced multiple scattering. Having a thin sensor with built-in amplification allows, in addition, to reduce the thickness without significant signal loss. These diodes have a built-in amplification layer that allows to obtain a higher signal than that of a standard diode of the same thickness. Two different techniques were employed to characterize them. Measurements of capacitance and leakage current versus bias voltage to extract the depletion voltage, and Transient Current Technique (TCT) to calculate the absolute gain of the device. Red laser is used for TCT to determine properties of charge carrier's motion. The gain of four samples is calculated with a method we call "kink method" which uses the ratio of charge induced by holes to charge induced by electrons. We also used a second method based on comparing the collected charge with a reference diode.CERN-STUDENTS-Note-2013-146oai:cds.cern.ch:15962442013-08-30
spellingShingle Detectors and Experimental Techniques
Sekihata, Daiki
Measurements of low gain diodes using Transient Current Technique
title Measurements of low gain diodes using Transient Current Technique
title_full Measurements of low gain diodes using Transient Current Technique
title_fullStr Measurements of low gain diodes using Transient Current Technique
title_full_unstemmed Measurements of low gain diodes using Transient Current Technique
title_short Measurements of low gain diodes using Transient Current Technique
title_sort measurements of low gain diodes using transient current technique
topic Detectors and Experimental Techniques
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/1596244
work_keys_str_mv AT sekihatadaiki measurementsoflowgaindiodesusingtransientcurrenttechnique