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Performance and operation experience of the Atlas Semiconductor Tracker

We report on the operation and performance of the ATLAS Semi-Conductor Tracker (SCT), which has been functioning for 3 years in the high luminosity, high radiation environment of the Large Hadron Collider at CERN. We’ll also report on the few improvements of the SCT foreseen for the high energy run...

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Autor principal: Liang, Z
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/1596946
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author Liang, Z
author_facet Liang, Z
author_sort Liang, Z
collection CERN
description We report on the operation and performance of the ATLAS Semi-Conductor Tracker (SCT), which has been functioning for 3 years in the high luminosity, high radiation environment of the Large Hadron Collider at CERN. We’ll also report on the few improvements of the SCT foreseen for the high energy run of the LHC. The SCT is constructed of 4088 silicon detector modules, for a total of 6.3 million strips. Each module operates as a stand-alone unit, mechanically, electrically, optically and thermally. The modules are mounted into two types of structures: one barrel, made of 4 cylinders, and two end-cap systems made of 9 disks. The SCT silicon micro-strip sensors are processed in the planar p-in-n technology. The signals are processed in the front-end ABCD3TA ASICs, which use a binary readout architecture. Data is transferred to the off-detector readout electronics via optical fibres. We find 99.3% of the SCT modules are operational, the noise occupancy and hit efficiency exceed the design specifications; the alignment is very close to the ideal to allow on-line track reconstruction and invariant mass determination. We will report on the operation and performance of the detector including an overview of the issues encountered. We observe a significant increase in leakage currents from bulk damage due to non-ionizing radiation and make comparisons with the predictions. \nWe will also cover the time evolution of the key parameters of the strip tracker, including the evolution of noise and gain, the measurement of the Lorentz angle and the tracking efficiency in the harsh LHC environment. Valuable lessons for future silicon strip detector projects will be presented.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2013
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spelling cern-15969462019-09-30T06:29:59Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1596946engLiang, ZPerformance and operation experience of the Atlas Semiconductor TrackerDetectors and Experimental TechniquesWe report on the operation and performance of the ATLAS Semi-Conductor Tracker (SCT), which has been functioning for 3 years in the high luminosity, high radiation environment of the Large Hadron Collider at CERN. We’ll also report on the few improvements of the SCT foreseen for the high energy run of the LHC. The SCT is constructed of 4088 silicon detector modules, for a total of 6.3 million strips. Each module operates as a stand-alone unit, mechanically, electrically, optically and thermally. The modules are mounted into two types of structures: one barrel, made of 4 cylinders, and two end-cap systems made of 9 disks. The SCT silicon micro-strip sensors are processed in the planar p-in-n technology. The signals are processed in the front-end ABCD3TA ASICs, which use a binary readout architecture. Data is transferred to the off-detector readout electronics via optical fibres. We find 99.3% of the SCT modules are operational, the noise occupancy and hit efficiency exceed the design specifications; the alignment is very close to the ideal to allow on-line track reconstruction and invariant mass determination. We will report on the operation and performance of the detector including an overview of the issues encountered. We observe a significant increase in leakage currents from bulk damage due to non-ionizing radiation and make comparisons with the predictions. \nWe will also cover the time evolution of the key parameters of the strip tracker, including the evolution of noise and gain, the measurement of the Lorentz angle and the tracking efficiency in the harsh LHC environment. Valuable lessons for future silicon strip detector projects will be presented.ATL-INDET-SLIDE-2013-506oai:cds.cern.ch:15969462013-09-04
spellingShingle Detectors and Experimental Techniques
Liang, Z
Performance and operation experience of the Atlas Semiconductor Tracker
title Performance and operation experience of the Atlas Semiconductor Tracker
title_full Performance and operation experience of the Atlas Semiconductor Tracker
title_fullStr Performance and operation experience of the Atlas Semiconductor Tracker
title_full_unstemmed Performance and operation experience of the Atlas Semiconductor Tracker
title_short Performance and operation experience of the Atlas Semiconductor Tracker
title_sort performance and operation experience of the atlas semiconductor tracker
topic Detectors and Experimental Techniques
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/1596946
work_keys_str_mv AT liangz performanceandoperationexperienceoftheatlassemiconductortracker