10–14 Nov 2025
CERN
Europe/Zurich timezone

Performance of AC-LGADs for ePIC and beyond

11 Nov 2025, 16:34
16m
6/2-024 - BE Auditorium Meyrin (CERN)

6/2-024 - BE Auditorium Meyrin

CERN

114
Show room on map
WG2 - Hybrid silicon sensors WG2 - Hybrid silicon technologies

Speaker

Dr Simone Michele Mazza (University of California,Santa Cruz (US))

Description

Low Gain Avalanche Detectors (LGADs) are characterized by a fast rise time (~500ps) and extremely good time resolution (down to 17ps), and potential for a very high repetition rate with ~1 ns full charge collection. For the application of this technology to near future experiments such as e+e- Higgs factories (FCC-ee), the ePIC detector at the Electron-Ion Collider, or smaller experiments (e.g., the PIONEER experiment), the intrinsic low granularity of LGADs and the large power consumption of readout chips for precise timing is problematic. AC-coupled LGADs, where the readout metal is AC-coupled through an insulating oxide layer, could solve both issues at the same time thanks to the 100% fill factor and charge-sharing capabilities. Charge sharing between electrodes allows a hit position resolution well below the pitch/sqrt(12) of standard segmented detectors. At the same time, it relaxes the channel density and power consumption requirement of readout chips. Extensive characterization of AC-LGAD devices from the first full size (up to 3x4 cm) production from HPK for ePIC will be shown in this contribution. We will present the first results on AC-LGADs irradiated with 1 MeV reactor neutrons and protons as well. We’ll also present a look into the future development of AC-LGADs for the improvement of production yield and performance.

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

Authors

Abraham Seiden (University of California,Santa Cruz (US)) Adam Molnar Bruce Schumm UNKNOWN Hartmut Sadrozinski (SCIPP, UC santa Cruz) Dr Simone Michele Mazza (University of California,Santa Cruz (US))

Presentation materials