Help us make Indico better by taking this survey! Aidez-nous à améliorer Indico en répondant à ce sondage !

21–23 Nov 2011
CERN
Europe/Zurich timezone

Development of radiation-hard active sensors in 180 nm HV CMOS technology

22 Nov 2011, 16:50
20m
503/1-001 - Council Chamber (CERN)

503/1-001 - Council Chamber

CERN

Building 503-1-001
162
Show room on map

Speaker

Daniel Muenstermann (CERN)

Description

While CMOS processes are cost-efficient and commercially available, they have not yet been used to produce radiation-hard sensors. So-called HV CMOS processes combine a slightly higher resistivity p-type substrate with deep n-wells and allow the combination of a drift-based electron-collecting sensor with active cuircit components while keeping a fill factor of 100%. Achievable depletion depths are in the order of 10-20 um. The presentation will introduce the concept, present preliminary results obtained with first test chips and outline the planned submission of a combined active strip/pixel sensor chip.

Summary

While CMOS processes are cost-efficient and commercially available, they have not yet been used to produce radiation-hard sensors. So-called HV CMOS processes combine a slightly higher resistivity p-type substrate with deep n-wells and allow the combination of a drift-based electron-collecting sensor with active cuircit components. Achievable depletion depths are in the order of 10-20 um.

This allows for novel sensor concepts such as having the first amplifier (and more electronics if desired) directly in a (very small) pixel sensor cell. Due to the low input capacitance of the small pixel, the noise contribution is very small and the signal-to-noise ratio is superb in spite of the rather shallow depletion zone and signal. These small pixel cells can then combined to form virtual strips or larger pixels which match already existing readout electronics chips, e.g. Beetle or FE-I4. Analogue hit encoding can yield improved resolution compared to the readout-chip pitch.

The presentation will introduce the concept, present preliminary results obtained with first test chips and outline a planned submission of a combined active strip/pixel sensor chip.

Primary authors

Daniel Muenstermann (CERN) Dr Ivan Peric (Ruprecht-Karls-Universitaet Heidelberg (DE))

Presentation materials