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A comprehensive analysis of irradiated silicon detectors at cryogenic temperatures

The effect of particle irradiation on high-resistivity silicon detectors has been extensively studied with the goal of engineering devices able to survive the very challenging radiation environment at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC). The main aspect under investigation has been the changes obse...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Santocchia, A, Bilei, G M, Hall, G, MacEvoy, B, Moscatelli, F, Passeri, D, Pignatel, Giogrio Umberto
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2003
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TNS.2003.814570
http://cds.cern.ch/record/725892
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author Santocchia, A
Bilei, G M
Hall, G
MacEvoy, B
Moscatelli, F
Passeri, D
Pignatel, Giogrio Umberto
author_facet Santocchia, A
Bilei, G M
Hall, G
MacEvoy, B
Moscatelli, F
Passeri, D
Pignatel, Giogrio Umberto
author_sort Santocchia, A
collection CERN
description The effect of particle irradiation on high-resistivity silicon detectors has been extensively studied with the goal of engineering devices able to survive the very challenging radiation environment at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC). The main aspect under investigation has been the changes observed in detector effective doping concentration (N/sub eff/). We have previously proposed a mechanism to explain the evolution of N/sub eff/, whereby charge is exchanged directly between closely-spaced defect centres in the dense terminal clusters formed by hadron irradiation. This model has been implemented in both a commercial finite-element device simulator (ISE-TCAD) and a purpose-built simulation of interdefect charge exchange. To control the risk of breakdown due to the high leakage currents foreseen during ten years of LHC operation, silicon detectors will be operated below room temperature (around -10 degrees C). This, and more general current interest in the field of cryogenic operation, has led us to investigate the behavior of our model over a wide range of temperatures. We present charge collection spectra from 1064 nm laser pulses as a function of detector bias between temperatures of 115 K and 290 K, using devices irradiated with 23 GeV protons in the range 10/sup 13/-4*10/sup 14/ protons.cm/sup -2/. These data allow a deeper investigation of the influence of defect capture cross sections on N/sub eff/. The model prediction for the reversion to n-type of heavily-irradiated detectors at low temperature is investigated and deviations from the model are explored. (25 refs).
id cern-725892
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2003
record_format invenio
spelling cern-7258922019-09-30T06:29:59Zdoi:10.1109/TNS.2003.814570http://cds.cern.ch/record/725892engSantocchia, ABilei, G MHall, GMacEvoy, BMoscatelli, FPasseri, DPignatel, Giogrio UmbertoA comprehensive analysis of irradiated silicon detectors at cryogenic temperaturesHealth Physics and Radiation EffectsThe effect of particle irradiation on high-resistivity silicon detectors has been extensively studied with the goal of engineering devices able to survive the very challenging radiation environment at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC). The main aspect under investigation has been the changes observed in detector effective doping concentration (N/sub eff/). We have previously proposed a mechanism to explain the evolution of N/sub eff/, whereby charge is exchanged directly between closely-spaced defect centres in the dense terminal clusters formed by hadron irradiation. This model has been implemented in both a commercial finite-element device simulator (ISE-TCAD) and a purpose-built simulation of interdefect charge exchange. To control the risk of breakdown due to the high leakage currents foreseen during ten years of LHC operation, silicon detectors will be operated below room temperature (around -10 degrees C). This, and more general current interest in the field of cryogenic operation, has led us to investigate the behavior of our model over a wide range of temperatures. We present charge collection spectra from 1064 nm laser pulses as a function of detector bias between temperatures of 115 K and 290 K, using devices irradiated with 23 GeV protons in the range 10/sup 13/-4*10/sup 14/ protons.cm/sup -2/. These data allow a deeper investigation of the influence of defect capture cross sections on N/sub eff/. The model prediction for the reversion to n-type of heavily-irradiated detectors at low temperature is investigated and deviations from the model are explored. (25 refs).oai:cds.cern.ch:7258922003
spellingShingle Health Physics and Radiation Effects
Santocchia, A
Bilei, G M
Hall, G
MacEvoy, B
Moscatelli, F
Passeri, D
Pignatel, Giogrio Umberto
A comprehensive analysis of irradiated silicon detectors at cryogenic temperatures
title A comprehensive analysis of irradiated silicon detectors at cryogenic temperatures
title_full A comprehensive analysis of irradiated silicon detectors at cryogenic temperatures
title_fullStr A comprehensive analysis of irradiated silicon detectors at cryogenic temperatures
title_full_unstemmed A comprehensive analysis of irradiated silicon detectors at cryogenic temperatures
title_short A comprehensive analysis of irradiated silicon detectors at cryogenic temperatures
title_sort comprehensive analysis of irradiated silicon detectors at cryogenic temperatures
topic Health Physics and Radiation Effects
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TNS.2003.814570
http://cds.cern.ch/record/725892
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