2–6 Dec 2024
CERN
Europe/Zurich timezone

Performance studies of the CE-65v2 MAPS prototype structure

5 Dec 2024, 16:00
20m
500/1-001 - Main Auditorium (CERN)

500/1-001 - Main Auditorium

CERN

400
Show room on map
WG1 - Monolithic Sensors WG1 - CMOS technologies

Speaker

Alessandra Lorenzetti (University of Zurich (CH))

Description

With the next upgrade of the ALICE inner tracking system (ITS3) as its primary focus, a set of small MAPS test chips have been developed in the 65 nm TPSCo CMOS process. The Circuit Exploratoire 65 nm (CE-65) focuses on the important characterisation of the analogue charge collection properties of this technology. The latest iteration of sensor design in this line of development is CE-65v2, which was produced in different processes (standard, with a low-dose n-type blanket, and blanket with gap between pixel) and pixel pitches (15, 18, $22.5 \mu$m). The comparatively large pixel array size of $48\times24$ pixels in CE-65v2 allows, among other benefits, to study the uniformity of the pixel response.
This year, the CE-65v2 chip was characterised in a test beam at the CERN SPS. A first analysis showed that hit efficiencies of $\geq 99\%$ and spatial resolution better than $5\mu$m can be achieved for all pitches and process variants. For the standard process, with a pitch of $15\mu$m, spatial resolutions below $3\mu$m are achieved, thanks to larger charge sharing between the pixels, in line with the requirements of FCC-ee vertex detectors.
This contribution further investigates the data collected at the SPS test beam. The large amount of statistics collected, thanks to the large sensor size and efficient data taking, allow for detailed in-pixel studies to see the efficiency and spatial resolution as a function of the hit position within the pixels, again comparing different pitches and process variants.

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

Author

Alessandra Lorenzetti (University of Zurich (CH))

Co-authors

Anna Macchiolo (University of Zurich (CH)) Armin Ilg (University of Zurich)

Presentation materials