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Silicon pixel-detector R&D for CLIC

The physics aims at the future CLIC high-energy linear e+e- collider set very high precision requirements on the performance of the vertex and tracking detectors. Moreover, these detectors have to be well adapted to the experimental conditions, such as the time structure of the collisions and the pr...

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Autor principal: Nurnberg, Andreas Matthias
Formato: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: JINST 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1748-0221/11/11/C11039
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2223830
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author Nurnberg, Andreas Matthias
author_facet Nurnberg, Andreas Matthias
author_sort Nurnberg, Andreas Matthias
collection CERN
description The physics aims at the future CLIC high-energy linear e+e- collider set very high precision requirements on the performance of the vertex and tracking detectors. Moreover, these detectors have to be well adapted to the experimental conditions, such as the time structure of the collisions and the presence of beam-induced backgrounds. The principal challenges are: a point resolution of a few μm, ultra-low mass (∼ 0.2% X${}_0$ per layer for the vertex region and ∼ 1 % X${}_0$ per layer for the outer tracker), very low power dissipation (compatible with air-flow cooling in the inner vertex region) and pulsed power operation, complemented with ∼ 10 ns time stamping capabilities. A highly granular all-silicon vertex and tracking detector system is under development, following an integrated approach addressing simultaneously the physics requirements and engineering constraints. For the vertex-detector region, hybrid pixel detectors with small pitch (25 μm) and analog readout are explored. For the outer tracking region, both hybrid concepts and fully integrated CMOS sensors are under consideration. The feasibility of ultra-thin sensor layers is validated with Timepix3 readout ASICs bump bonded to active edge planar sensors with 50–150 μm thickness. Prototypes of CLICpix readout ASICs implemented in 65 nm CMOS technology with 25 μm pixel pitch have been produced. Hybridisation concepts have been developed for interconnecting these chips either through capacitive coupling to active HV-CMOS sensors or through bump-bonding to planar sensors. Recent R&D achievements include results from beam tests with all types of hybrid assemblies. Simulations based on Geant4 and TCAD are used to validate the experimental results and to assess and optimise the performance of various detector designs.
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spelling cern-22238302022-08-10T12:48:19Z doi:10.1088/1748-0221/11/11/C11039 http://cds.cern.ch/record/2223830 eng Nurnberg, Andreas Matthias Silicon pixel-detector R&D for CLIC Detectors and Experimental Techniques 7: Advanced hybrid pixel detectors The physics aims at the future CLIC high-energy linear e+e- collider set very high precision requirements on the performance of the vertex and tracking detectors. Moreover, these detectors have to be well adapted to the experimental conditions, such as the time structure of the collisions and the presence of beam-induced backgrounds. The principal challenges are: a point resolution of a few μm, ultra-low mass (∼ 0.2% X${}_0$ per layer for the vertex region and ∼ 1 % X${}_0$ per layer for the outer tracker), very low power dissipation (compatible with air-flow cooling in the inner vertex region) and pulsed power operation, complemented with ∼ 10 ns time stamping capabilities. A highly granular all-silicon vertex and tracking detector system is under development, following an integrated approach addressing simultaneously the physics requirements and engineering constraints. For the vertex-detector region, hybrid pixel detectors with small pitch (25 μm) and analog readout are explored. For the outer tracking region, both hybrid concepts and fully integrated CMOS sensors are under consideration. The feasibility of ultra-thin sensor layers is validated with Timepix3 readout ASICs bump bonded to active edge planar sensors with 50–150 μm thickness. Prototypes of CLICpix readout ASICs implemented in 65 nm CMOS technology with 25 μm pixel pitch have been produced. Hybridisation concepts have been developed for interconnecting these chips either through capacitive coupling to active HV-CMOS sensors or through bump-bonding to planar sensors. Recent R&D achievements include results from beam tests with all types of hybrid assemblies. Simulations based on Geant4 and TCAD are used to validate the experimental results and to assess and optimise the performance of various detector designs. info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/FP7/654168 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Education Level info:eu-repo/semantics/article http://cds.cern.ch/record/2223830 JINST JINST, 11 (2016) pp. C11039 2016
spellingShingle Detectors and Experimental Techniques
7: Advanced hybrid pixel detectors
Nurnberg, Andreas Matthias
Silicon pixel-detector R&D for CLIC
title Silicon pixel-detector R&D for CLIC
title_full Silicon pixel-detector R&D for CLIC
title_fullStr Silicon pixel-detector R&D for CLIC
title_full_unstemmed Silicon pixel-detector R&D for CLIC
title_short Silicon pixel-detector R&D for CLIC
title_sort silicon pixel-detector r&d for clic
topic Detectors and Experimental Techniques
7: Advanced hybrid pixel detectors
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1748-0221/11/11/C11039
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2223830
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2223830
work_keys_str_mv AT nurnbergandreasmatthias siliconpixeldetectorrdforclic