17–21 Jun 2024
CERN
Europe/Zurich timezone

Radiation Hardness and Leakage Current Homogeneity of CMS HGCAL 8-Inch Silicon Sensors irradiated at RINSC

19 Jun 2024, 10:50
20m
500/1-001 - Main Auditorium (CERN)

500/1-001 - Main Auditorium

CERN

400
Show room on map
WG3 - Radiation Damage - Extreme Fluence WG3/WP3 - Extreme fluence and radiation damage characterization

Speaker

Marta Adamina Krawczyk (CERN)

Description

The High-Luminosity LHC will challenge the detectors with a nearly 10-fold increase in integrated luminosity compared to the previous LHC runs combined, thus the CMS detector will be upgraded to face the higher levels of radiation and the larger amounts of data collected. The High-Granularity Calorimeter (HGCAL) will replace the current endcap calorimeters of the CMS detector. It will facilitate the use of particle-flow calorimetry with its unprecedented transverse and longitudinal readout/trigger segmentation, with more than 6M readout channels. The electromagnetic section as well as the high-radiation regions of the hadronic section of the HGCAL (fluences above 1014 neq/cm2) will be equipped with silicon pad sensors, covering a total area of 620 m2. Fluences up to 1016 neq/cm2 and doses up to 1.5 MGy are expected. The sensors are processed on novel 8-inch p-type wafers with an active thickness of 300 μm, 200 μm and 120 μm and cut into hexagonal shapes for optimal use of the wafer area and tiling. Each sensor contains several hundred individually read out cells of two sizes (around 0.5 cm2 or 1.2 cm2). In order to investigate the radiation-induced bulk damage, the sensors have been irradiated with neutrons at RINSC (Rhode Island Nuclear Science Centre, US) to fluences between 6.5·1014 neq/cm2 and 1.5·1016 neq/cm2. We present electrical characterisation (IV) results from partial sensors cut from multi-geometry wafers with internal dicing lines on the HV potential within the active sensor area as well as from full sensors. The leakage current data is corrected for the pad volume to become sensitive to fluence and annealing inhomogeneities across the 8-inch sensor area. We investigate means to limit the annealing time of the sensors during irradiation, analyzing the influence of the irradiation container material and the impact of splitting high-fluence irradiations. Finally, we provide recommendations for future irradiation campaigns in the RINSC irradiation facility.

Type of presentation (in-person/online) in-person presentation
Type of presentation (scientific results or project proposal) Presentation on scientific results

Author

Co-author

Nick Hinton (Brown University (US))

Presentation materials