Picosecond Avalanche Detector — working principle and gain measurement with a proof-of-concept prototype

Abstract

The Picosecond Avalanche Detector is a multi-junction silicon pixel detector based on a (NP)drift(NP)gain structure, devised to enable charged-particle tracking with high spatial resolution and picosecond time-stamp capability. It uses a continuous junction deep inside the sensor volume to amplify the primary charge produced by ionizing radiation in a thin absorption layer. The signal is then induced by the secondary charges moving inside a thicker drift region. A proof-of-concept monolithic prototype, consisting of a matrix of hexagonal pixels with 100 μm pitch, has been produced using the 130 nm SiGe BiCMOS process by IHP microelectronics. Measurements on probe station and with a 55Fe X-ray source show that the prototype is functional and displays avalanche gain up to a maximum electron gain of 23. A study of the avalanche characteristics, corroborated by TCAD simulations, indicates that space-charge effects due to the large primary charge produced by the conversion of X-rays from the ^55Fe source limits the effective gain.

Description
Keywords
Particle tracking detectors (Solid-state detectors), Pixelated detectors and associated VLSI electronics, Solid state detectors, Timing detectors
Citation
Paolozzi, L., Munker, M., Cardella, R., Milanesio, M., Gurimskaya, Y., Martinelli, F., et al. (2022). Picosecond Avalanche Detector — working principle and gain measurement with a proof-of-concept prototype. 17(10). https://doi.org//10.1088/1748-0221/17/10/p10032
Collections
License
CC BY 4.0 Unported