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A novel source–drain follower for monolithic active pixel sensors

Monolithic active pixel sensors (MAPS) receive interest in tracking applications in high energy physics as they integrate sensor and readout electronics in one silicon die with potential for lower material budget and cost, and better performance. Source followers (SFs) are widely used for MAPS reado...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Gao, C, Aglieri, G, Hillemanns, H, Huang, G, Junique, A, Keil, M, Kim, D, Kofarago, M, Kugathasan, T, Mager, M, Marin Tobon, C A, Martinengo, P, Mugnier, H, Musa, L, Lee, S, Reidt, F, Riedler, P, Rousset, J, Sielewicz, K M, Snoeys, W, Sun, X, Van Hoorne, J W, Yang, P
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nima.2016.03.074
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2263715
Descripción
Sumario:Monolithic active pixel sensors (MAPS) receive interest in tracking applications in high energy physics as they integrate sensor and readout electronics in one silicon die with potential for lower material budget and cost, and better performance. Source followers (SFs) are widely used for MAPS readout: they increase charge conversion gain 1/ C eff or decrease the effective sensing node capacitance C eff because the follower action compensates part of the input capacitance. Charge conversion gain is critical for analog power consumption and therefore for material budget in tracking applications, and also has direct system impact. This paper presents a novel source–drain follower (SDF), where both source and drain follow the gate potential improving charge conversion gain. For the inner tracking system (ITS) upgrade of the ALICE experiment at CERN, low material budget is a primary requirement. The SDF circuit was studied as part of the effort to optimize the effective capacitance of the sensing node. The collection electrode, input transistor and routing metal all contribute to C eff . Reverse sensor bias reduces the collection electrode capacitance. The novel SDF circuit eliminates the contribution of the input transistor to C eff , reduces the routing contribution if additional shielding is introduced, provides a way to estimate the capacitance of the sensor itself, and has a voltage gain closer to unity than the standard SF. The SDF circuit has a somewhat larger area with a somewhat smaller bandwidth, but this is acceptable in most cases.