Conveners
Pixel and 3D sensors
- Richard Bates (Department of Physics and Astronomy)
Mr
André Rummler
(TU Dortmund)
25/05/2011, 09:00
Full Detector Systems (Pixel Sensors)
We have irradiated n+-in-n sensor assemblies based on the current ATLAS readout chip FE-I3 up to the required IBL end of life fluence 5x1015 neq/cm2 (and further up to 2x1016 neq/cm2 for HLLHC) using thermal neutrons in Ljubljana as well as low energy protons in Karlsruhe. Promising results, particularly hit...
Philipp Weigell
(MPI für Physik)
25/05/2011, 09:20
FE-I3 compatible, n-in-p single chip modules, produced in the framework of a joint RD50-ATLAS planar pixel group production have been irradatiad up to 5x1015 neq/cm2 with protons (KIT and CERN PS) and reactor neutrons (JSI). They were characterized in the laboratory as well as under beam-test conditions at the CERN SPS.
New results on the charge collection...
Mr
Dean Charles Forshaw
(Department of Physics-Oliver Lodge Laboratory-University of Liv)
25/05/2011, 09:40
The charge sharing between adjacent segmented electrodes is an important parameter for the spatial resolution of tracking silicon sensors. Hadron irradiation is though known to decrease charge sharing by mean of trapping of the signal charge carriers
generated by the ionising event, to eventually reduce the resolution of the sensor to binary. The study of the degradation of charge...
Mr
Roger Caminal Armadans
(IFAE - Institut de Física d'Altes Energies-Universitat Autònoma)
25/05/2011, 10:00
Solid state detectors provide very high precision tracking in particle physics experiments. However, their tracking performance start to degrade at fluxes of radiation around ~10¹⁴-10¹⁵ hadrons/cm². Research on new radiation-hard pixel sensor technologies is being done at IFAE, in collaboration with CNM. Results of the characterisation and beam test studies of n-in-p planar and 3D double sided...
Dr
Giulio Pellegrini
(Centro Nacional de Microelectronica CNM-IMB-CSIC)
25/05/2011, 10:50
I will report on the last fabrications and measurements of 3D detectors for the IBL project.
Richard Bates
(Department of Physics and Astronomy)
25/05/2011, 11:30