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Charge collection in Si detectors irradiated in situ at superfluid helium temperature

Silicon and diamond detectors operated in a superfluid helium bath are currently being considered for the upgrade of the LHC beam loss monitoring system. The detectors would be installed in immediate proximity of the superconducting coils of the triplet magnets. We present here the results of the in...

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Autores principales: Verbitskaya, Elena, Eremin, Vladimir, Zabrodskii, Andrei, Dehning, Bernd, Kurfürst, Christoph, Sapinski, Mariusz, Bartosik, Marcin R, Egorov, Nicolai, Härkönen, Jaakko
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nima.2015.03.027
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2161837
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author Verbitskaya, Elena
Eremin, Vladimir
Zabrodskii, Andrei
Dehning, Bernd
Kurfürst, Christoph
Sapinski, Mariusz
Bartosik, Marcin R
Egorov, Nicolai
Härkönen, Jaakko
author_facet Verbitskaya, Elena
Eremin, Vladimir
Zabrodskii, Andrei
Dehning, Bernd
Kurfürst, Christoph
Sapinski, Mariusz
Bartosik, Marcin R
Egorov, Nicolai
Härkönen, Jaakko
author_sort Verbitskaya, Elena
collection CERN
description Silicon and diamond detectors operated in a superfluid helium bath are currently being considered for the upgrade of the LHC beam loss monitoring system. The detectors would be installed in immediate proximity of the superconducting coils of the triplet magnets. We present here the results of the in situ irradiation test for silicon detectors using 23 GeV protons while keeping the detectors at a temperature of 1.9 K. Red laser (630 nm) Transient Current Technique and DC current measurements were used to study the pulse response and collected charge for silicon detectors irradiated to a maximum radiation fluence of 1×10 16 p/cm 2 . The dependence between collected charge and irradiation fluence was parameterized using the Hecht equation and assumption of a uniform electric field distribution. The collected charge was found to degrade with particle fluence for both bias polarities. We observed that the main factor responsible for this degradation was related to trapping of holes on the donor-type radiation-induced defects. In contrast to expectations, along with formation of donors, acceptor-type defects (electron traps) are introduced into the silicon bulk. This suggests that the current models describing charge collection in irradiated silicon detectors require an extension for taking into account trapping at low temperatures with a contribution of shallow levels. New in situ irradiation tests are needed and planned now to extend statistics of the results and gain a deeper insight into the physics of low temperature detector operation in harsh radiation environment.
id oai-inspirehep.net-1389028
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2015
record_format invenio
spelling oai-inspirehep.net-13890282022-08-10T13:06:55Zdoi:10.1016/j.nima.2015.03.027http://cds.cern.ch/record/2161837engVerbitskaya, ElenaEremin, VladimirZabrodskii, AndreiDehning, BerndKurfürst, ChristophSapinski, MariuszBartosik, Marcin REgorov, NicolaiHärkönen, JaakkoCharge collection in Si detectors irradiated in situ at superfluid helium temperatureDetectors and Experimental TechniquesSilicon and diamond detectors operated in a superfluid helium bath are currently being considered for the upgrade of the LHC beam loss monitoring system. The detectors would be installed in immediate proximity of the superconducting coils of the triplet magnets. We present here the results of the in situ irradiation test for silicon detectors using 23 GeV protons while keeping the detectors at a temperature of 1.9 K. Red laser (630 nm) Transient Current Technique and DC current measurements were used to study the pulse response and collected charge for silicon detectors irradiated to a maximum radiation fluence of 1×10 16 p/cm 2 . The dependence between collected charge and irradiation fluence was parameterized using the Hecht equation and assumption of a uniform electric field distribution. The collected charge was found to degrade with particle fluence for both bias polarities. We observed that the main factor responsible for this degradation was related to trapping of holes on the donor-type radiation-induced defects. In contrast to expectations, along with formation of donors, acceptor-type defects (electron traps) are introduced into the silicon bulk. This suggests that the current models describing charge collection in irradiated silicon detectors require an extension for taking into account trapping at low temperatures with a contribution of shallow levels. New in situ irradiation tests are needed and planned now to extend statistics of the results and gain a deeper insight into the physics of low temperature detector operation in harsh radiation environment.oai:inspirehep.net:13890282015
spellingShingle Detectors and Experimental Techniques
Verbitskaya, Elena
Eremin, Vladimir
Zabrodskii, Andrei
Dehning, Bernd
Kurfürst, Christoph
Sapinski, Mariusz
Bartosik, Marcin R
Egorov, Nicolai
Härkönen, Jaakko
Charge collection in Si detectors irradiated in situ at superfluid helium temperature
title Charge collection in Si detectors irradiated in situ at superfluid helium temperature
title_full Charge collection in Si detectors irradiated in situ at superfluid helium temperature
title_fullStr Charge collection in Si detectors irradiated in situ at superfluid helium temperature
title_full_unstemmed Charge collection in Si detectors irradiated in situ at superfluid helium temperature
title_short Charge collection in Si detectors irradiated in situ at superfluid helium temperature
title_sort charge collection in si detectors irradiated in situ at superfluid helium temperature
topic Detectors and Experimental Techniques
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nima.2015.03.027
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2161837
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