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Operational voltage of silicon heavily irradiated strip detectors utilizing avalanche multiplication effect

Recent results on the collected charge $Q_c$ in heavily irradiated Si strip detectors developed by RD50 collaboration for the high luminosity operation of the LHC (sLHC) showed a significant $Q_c$ enhancement if the detectors were operated at a bias voltage beyond 1000 V. To explain these results, a...

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Autores principales: Verbitskaya, E, Eremin, V, Zabrodskii, A
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1748-0221/7/02/C02061
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2634745
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author Verbitskaya, E
Eremin, V
Zabrodskii, A
author_facet Verbitskaya, E
Eremin, V
Zabrodskii, A
author_sort Verbitskaya, E
collection CERN
description Recent results on the collected charge $Q_c$ in heavily irradiated Si strip detectors developed by RD50 collaboration for the high luminosity operation of the LHC (sLHC) showed a significant $Q_c$ enhancement if the detectors were operated at a bias voltage beyond 1000 V. To explain these results, a physical model based on carrier avalanche multiplication in high electric fields near a n$^+$-p junction was developed at the Ioffe Physical-Technical Institute. This study represents an extension of the model, whose goal is finding the detector bias voltage and the other operating conditions which lead to such charge enhancement. The electric field distribution and collected charge in heavily irradiated Si strip detectors are calculated at different conditions: bias voltage, temperature, radiation fluence and strip detector geometry. It is demonstrated that: a) the minimum operational voltage, which initiates the avalanche process, depends on the fluence (being 500 V and 1500 V for LHC and sLHC fluence range, respectively), b) in avalanche multiplication mode the electric field near the n$^+$-strips is stabilized via potential redistribution inside the detector and formation of a pronounced DP electric field profile and is about 300 kV/cm, and c) the model predicts that the maximum collected charge in detectors irradiated to $(2-5) \times 10^{15}$ \rm{n}_{eq}cm^{-2}$ is larger than in a non-irradiated detector that nicely agrees with the experimental data. Another factor, which gives an enhanced avalanche multiplication at lower bias voltage, is the electric field focusing near the strips which then also leads to an enhancement of $Q_c$.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2012
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spelling oai-inspirehep.net-11079802019-09-30T06:29:59Zdoi:10.1088/1748-0221/7/02/C02061http://cds.cern.ch/record/2634745engVerbitskaya, EEremin, VZabrodskii, AOperational voltage of silicon heavily irradiated strip detectors utilizing avalanche multiplication effectDetectors and Experimental TechniquesRecent results on the collected charge $Q_c$ in heavily irradiated Si strip detectors developed by RD50 collaboration for the high luminosity operation of the LHC (sLHC) showed a significant $Q_c$ enhancement if the detectors were operated at a bias voltage beyond 1000 V. To explain these results, a physical model based on carrier avalanche multiplication in high electric fields near a n$^+$-p junction was developed at the Ioffe Physical-Technical Institute. This study represents an extension of the model, whose goal is finding the detector bias voltage and the other operating conditions which lead to such charge enhancement. The electric field distribution and collected charge in heavily irradiated Si strip detectors are calculated at different conditions: bias voltage, temperature, radiation fluence and strip detector geometry. It is demonstrated that: a) the minimum operational voltage, which initiates the avalanche process, depends on the fluence (being 500 V and 1500 V for LHC and sLHC fluence range, respectively), b) in avalanche multiplication mode the electric field near the n$^+$-strips is stabilized via potential redistribution inside the detector and formation of a pronounced DP electric field profile and is about 300 kV/cm, and c) the model predicts that the maximum collected charge in detectors irradiated to $(2-5) \times 10^{15}$ \rm{n}_{eq}cm^{-2}$ is larger than in a non-irradiated detector that nicely agrees with the experimental data. Another factor, which gives an enhanced avalanche multiplication at lower bias voltage, is the electric field focusing near the strips which then also leads to an enhancement of $Q_c$.oai:inspirehep.net:11079802012
spellingShingle Detectors and Experimental Techniques
Verbitskaya, E
Eremin, V
Zabrodskii, A
Operational voltage of silicon heavily irradiated strip detectors utilizing avalanche multiplication effect
title Operational voltage of silicon heavily irradiated strip detectors utilizing avalanche multiplication effect
title_full Operational voltage of silicon heavily irradiated strip detectors utilizing avalanche multiplication effect
title_fullStr Operational voltage of silicon heavily irradiated strip detectors utilizing avalanche multiplication effect
title_full_unstemmed Operational voltage of silicon heavily irradiated strip detectors utilizing avalanche multiplication effect
title_short Operational voltage of silicon heavily irradiated strip detectors utilizing avalanche multiplication effect
title_sort operational voltage of silicon heavily irradiated strip detectors utilizing avalanche multiplication effect
topic Detectors and Experimental Techniques
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1748-0221/7/02/C02061
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2634745
work_keys_str_mv AT verbitskayae operationalvoltageofsiliconheavilyirradiatedstripdetectorsutilizingavalanchemultiplicationeffect
AT ereminv operationalvoltageofsiliconheavilyirradiatedstripdetectorsutilizingavalanchemultiplicationeffect
AT zabrodskiia operationalvoltageofsiliconheavilyirradiatedstripdetectorsutilizingavalanchemultiplicationeffect