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A truly cylindrical inner tracker for ALICE

After the successful installation and first operation of the upgraded Inner Tracking System (ITS2), which consists of about $10\,$m$^2$ of monolithic silicon pixel sensors, ALICE is pioneering the usage of bent, wafer-scale pixel sensors for the ITS3 for LHC Run 4. Sensors larger than typical reticl...

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Autor principal: Yüncü, Alperen
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2843241
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author Yüncü, Alperen
author_facet Yüncü, Alperen
author_sort Yüncü, Alperen
collection CERN
description After the successful installation and first operation of the upgraded Inner Tracking System (ITS2), which consists of about $10\,$m$^2$ of monolithic silicon pixel sensors, ALICE is pioneering the usage of bent, wafer-scale pixel sensors for the ITS3 for LHC Run 4. Sensors larger than typical reticle sizes can be produced using the technique of stitching. At thicknesses of about $30\,\mu$m, silicon is flexible enough to be bent to radii of the order of $1\,$cm. By cooling such sensors with a forced airflow, it becomes possible to construct truly cylindrical layers which consist practically only of the silicon sensors. The reduction of the material budget and the improved pointing resolution will allow new measurements, in particular of heavy-flavor decays and electromagnetic probes. In this presentation, we will report on sensor developments, the performance of bent sensors in test beams, and the mechanical studies on truly cylindrical layers.
id cern-2843241
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2022
record_format invenio
spelling cern-28432412023-01-31T09:07:06Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2843241engYüncü, AlperenA truly cylindrical inner tracker for ALICEhep-exParticle Physics - Experimentphysics.ins-detDetectors and Experimental TechniquesAfter the successful installation and first operation of the upgraded Inner Tracking System (ITS2), which consists of about $10\,$m$^2$ of monolithic silicon pixel sensors, ALICE is pioneering the usage of bent, wafer-scale pixel sensors for the ITS3 for LHC Run 4. Sensors larger than typical reticle sizes can be produced using the technique of stitching. At thicknesses of about $30\,\mu$m, silicon is flexible enough to be bent to radii of the order of $1\,$cm. By cooling such sensors with a forced airflow, it becomes possible to construct truly cylindrical layers which consist practically only of the silicon sensors. The reduction of the material budget and the improved pointing resolution will allow new measurements, in particular of heavy-flavor decays and electromagnetic probes. In this presentation, we will report on sensor developments, the performance of bent sensors in test beams, and the mechanical studies on truly cylindrical layers.arXiv:2212.03165oai:cds.cern.ch:28432412022-12-06
spellingShingle hep-ex
Particle Physics - Experiment
physics.ins-det
Detectors and Experimental Techniques
Yüncü, Alperen
A truly cylindrical inner tracker for ALICE
title A truly cylindrical inner tracker for ALICE
title_full A truly cylindrical inner tracker for ALICE
title_fullStr A truly cylindrical inner tracker for ALICE
title_full_unstemmed A truly cylindrical inner tracker for ALICE
title_short A truly cylindrical inner tracker for ALICE
title_sort truly cylindrical inner tracker for alice
topic hep-ex
Particle Physics - Experiment
physics.ins-det
Detectors and Experimental Techniques
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2843241
work_keys_str_mv AT yuncualperen atrulycylindricalinnertrackerforalice
AT yuncualperen trulycylindricalinnertrackerforalice