25–29 Aug 2025
Madison, WI
US/Central timezone

Operational Experience and Performance with the ATLAS Pixel detector at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN

26 Aug 2025, 14:00
20m
Monona Convention Center (Madison, WI)

Monona Convention Center

Madison, WI

Instrumentation Parallel

Speaker

ATLAS Speaker

Description

The tracking performance of the ATLAS detector relies critically on its 4-layer Pixel
Detector, with a sensitive area of ~1.9 m2 and 92 million pixels. Its original part,
consisting in 3 layers of planar pixel sensor is continuously operating since the start
of LHC collisions in 2008, while Its innermost layer, the Insertable B Layer (IBL) at
about 3 cm from the beam line, was installed in 2015 before the start of LHC Run2
and consists of both planar and 3D pixel sensors, with FE-I4 readout frontends at
130nm CMOS technology.
As the closest detector component to the interaction point, this detector is subjected
to a significant amount of radiation over its lifetime. At present, before the start of
2025 Run3 LHC collisions, ATLAS Pixel Detector on innermost layers is operating
after integrating fluence of O(10**15) 1 MeV n_eq cm-2.
In this talk the key status and performance metrics of the ATLAS Pixel Detector are
summarised, putting focus on performance and operating conditions at a over
performing LHC, with special emphasis to radiation damage and mitigation
techniques adopted, with prediction of their evolution until the end of LHC Run3 in
2026.
These results provide useful indications for the optimisation of the operating
conditions for the new generation of pixel trackers under construction for HI-LHC
upgrades.

Authors

ATLAS Speaker Borut Paul Kersevan (Jozef Stefan Institute (SI))

Presentation materials

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