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Silicon sensors for the HGCAL upgrade challenges, sensor design and electrical characterization

The CMS detector will undergo significant improvements to face the 10-fold increase in integrated luminosity of LHC, the so-called High-Luminosity LHC, scheduled to start in 2026. This will include a completely new calorimeter in the CMS endcap regions, which should be able to withstand fluences of...

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Autor principal: Brondolin, Erica
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1748-0221/15/05/C05068
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2797460
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author Brondolin, Erica
author_facet Brondolin, Erica
author_sort Brondolin, Erica
collection CERN
description The CMS detector will undergo significant improvements to face the 10-fold increase in integrated luminosity of LHC, the so-called High-Luminosity LHC, scheduled to start in 2026. This will include a completely new calorimeter in the CMS endcap regions, which should be able to withstand fluences of up to $10^{16}~\textnormal{n}_{ \textnormal{eq}}/ \textnormal{cm}^2$. The new High Granularity Calorimeter (HGCAL) will have unprecedented transverse and longitudinal readout and trigger segmentation that will facilitate the particle-flow approach to reconstruct electromagnetic and hadronic particle showers and their energies. In regions of low radiation, HGCAL will be equipped with small plastic scintillator tiles as active material coupled to on-tile silicon photomultipliers. In the higher radiation zone silicon has been chosen due to its intrinsic radiation hardness. The silicon sensors will be of hexagonal shape, with three nominal thicknesses of 120~$\mu$m, 200~$\mu$m and 300~$\mu$m, optimized for regions of different radiation levels. They will be segmented into several hundred cells with hexagonal shape of 0.5 to $1.1~\textnormal{cm}^2$ in size, each of which is read out individually. A comprehensive campaign is in progress to converge on optimal sensor design choices and parameters, such as bulk doping, layouts and production methods. In this talk, results from full electrical sensor characterization are presented for different sensors, together with first results from an irradiation campaign of large-area silicon sensors.
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spelling cern-27974602023-03-14T17:31:47Zdoi:10.1088/1748-0221/15/05/C05068http://cds.cern.ch/record/2797460engBrondolin, EricaSilicon sensors for the HGCAL upgrade challenges, sensor design and electrical characterizationParticle Physics - ExperimentDetectors and Experimental TechniquesThe CMS detector will undergo significant improvements to face the 10-fold increase in integrated luminosity of LHC, the so-called High-Luminosity LHC, scheduled to start in 2026. This will include a completely new calorimeter in the CMS endcap regions, which should be able to withstand fluences of up to $10^{16}~\textnormal{n}_{ \textnormal{eq}}/ \textnormal{cm}^2$. The new High Granularity Calorimeter (HGCAL) will have unprecedented transverse and longitudinal readout and trigger segmentation that will facilitate the particle-flow approach to reconstruct electromagnetic and hadronic particle showers and their energies. In regions of low radiation, HGCAL will be equipped with small plastic scintillator tiles as active material coupled to on-tile silicon photomultipliers. In the higher radiation zone silicon has been chosen due to its intrinsic radiation hardness. The silicon sensors will be of hexagonal shape, with three nominal thicknesses of 120~$\mu$m, 200~$\mu$m and 300~$\mu$m, optimized for regions of different radiation levels. They will be segmented into several hundred cells with hexagonal shape of 0.5 to $1.1~\textnormal{cm}^2$ in size, each of which is read out individually. A comprehensive campaign is in progress to converge on optimal sensor design choices and parameters, such as bulk doping, layouts and production methods. In this talk, results from full electrical sensor characterization are presented for different sensors, together with first results from an irradiation campaign of large-area silicon sensors.The CMS detector will undergo significant improvements to face the 10-fold increase in integrated luminosity of LHC, the so-called High-Luminosity LHC, scheduled to start in 2027. This will include a completely new calorimeter in the CMS endcap regions, which should be able to withstand fluences of up to 1016 neq/cm2. The new High Granularity Calorimeter (HGCAL) will have unprecedented transverse and longitudinal readout and trigger segmentation that will facilitate the particle-flow approach to reconstruct electromagnetic and hadronic particle showers and their energies. In regions of low radiation, HGCAL will be equipped with small plastic scintillator tiles as active material coupled to on-tile silicon photomultipliers. In the higher radiation zone, silicon has been chosen due to its intrinsic radiation hardness. The silicon sensors will be of hexagonal shape, with three nominal thicknesses of 120 μm, 200 μm and 300 μm, optimized for regions of different radiation levels. They will be segmented into several hundred cells with hexagonal shape of 0.5 to 1.1 cm2 in size, each of which is read out individually. A comprehensive campaign is in progress to converge on optimal sensor design choices and parameters, such as bulk doping, layouts and production methods. Results from full electrical sensor characterization are presented for different sensors, together with first results from an irradiation campaign of large-area silicon sensors.The CMS detector will undergo significant improvements to face the 10-fold increase in integrated luminosity of LHC, the so-called High-Luminosity LHC, scheduled to start in 2027. This will include a completely new calorimeter in the CMS endcap regions, which should be able to withstand fluences of up to 10 16 n$_{eq}$ /cm$^2$ . The new High Granularity Calorimeter (HGCAL) will have unprecedented transverse and longitudinal readout and trigger segmentation that will facilitate the particle-flow approach to reconstruct electromagnetic and hadronic particle showers and their energies. In regions of low radiation, HGCAL will be equipped with small plastic scintillator tiles as active material coupled to on-tile silicon photomultipliers. In the higher radiation zone, silicon has been chosen due to its intrinsic radiation hardness. The silicon sensors will be of hexagonal shape, with three nominal thicknesses of 120 {\mu}m, 200 {\mu}m and 300 {\mu}m, optimized for regions of different radiation levels. They will be segmented into several hundred cells with hexagonal shape of 0.5 to 1.1 cm$^2$ in size, each of which is read out individually. A comprehensive campaign is in progress to converge on optimal sensor design choices and parameters, such as bulk doping, layouts and production methods. Results from full electrical sensor characterization are presented for different sensors, together with first results from an irradiation campaign of large-area silicon sensors.arXiv:2003.02461CMS-CR-2020-017oai:cds.cern.ch:27974602020-01-24
spellingShingle Particle Physics - Experiment
Detectors and Experimental Techniques
Brondolin, Erica
Silicon sensors for the HGCAL upgrade challenges, sensor design and electrical characterization
title Silicon sensors for the HGCAL upgrade challenges, sensor design and electrical characterization
title_full Silicon sensors for the HGCAL upgrade challenges, sensor design and electrical characterization
title_fullStr Silicon sensors for the HGCAL upgrade challenges, sensor design and electrical characterization
title_full_unstemmed Silicon sensors for the HGCAL upgrade challenges, sensor design and electrical characterization
title_short Silicon sensors for the HGCAL upgrade challenges, sensor design and electrical characterization
title_sort silicon sensors for the hgcal upgrade challenges, sensor design and electrical characterization
topic Particle Physics - Experiment
Detectors and Experimental Techniques
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1748-0221/15/05/C05068
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2797460
work_keys_str_mv AT brondolinerica siliconsensorsforthehgcalupgradechallengessensordesignandelectricalcharacterization