17–19 Feb 2026
Palazzo dei Priori, Perugia, Italy
Europe/Rome timezone

N-type LGADs for Particle and Photon Detection

17 Feb 2026, 14:14
1m
Sala dei Notari (Palazzo dei Priori, Perugia, Italy)

Sala dei Notari

Palazzo dei Priori, Perugia, Italy

Piazza 4 Novembre - PERUGIA ITALY

Speaker

Omar Hammad Ali

Description

Low-Gain Avalanche Diodes (LGADs) are typically fabricated on p-type substrates, following an n–p⁺–p junction configuration, where a boron-doped layer forms the gain region.
This architecture is considered optimal for timing and particle-tracking applications since the primary charge carriers initiating the avalanche process are electrons, which feature higher drift velocity and ionization coefficient compared to holes. However, for the detection of low-penetrating particles, such as soft X-rays, the conventional p-on-n configuration becomes less efficient. In these cases, most carriers are generated close to the front junction (n-type region) or within the high-field gain layer, resulting in reduced gain and possibly lower signal-to-noise ratio (SNR).
To overcome these limitations and improve the detection efficiency of low-energy photons and particles, LGADs on n-type substrates (N-LGADs) have been recently proposed. This inverted doping configuration, compared to standard LGADs, is expected to deliver higher gain and SNR for low-penetrating radiation, particularly for X-rays below 1 keV.

The fabricated N-LGADs employ 55 µm-thick n-type epitaxial substrates, with the front junction formed by boron ion implantation. Several junction depths and doping profiles have been implemented to investigate QE and Gain vs interaction depth as a function of junction design. Electrical characterization (I-V, C-V, and gain measurements) will be presented for the different splits, along with optical characterization in the 380–950 nm wavelength range. The latter enables the determination of Gain and QE as a function of the charge generation depth, providing a comprehensive comparison among the various device configurations.

Authors

Alessandro Fondacci (University and INFN Perugia (IT)) Anna Rita Altamura (Universita e INFN Torino (IT)) Arianna Morozzi (INFN, Perugia (IT)) Ashish Bisht (Fondazione Bruno Kessler (FBK)) Daniele PASSERI (University of Perugia) Federico Siviero (INFN - National Institute for Nuclear Physics) Federico Siviero (Universita e INFN Torino (IT)) Francesco Ficorella (Fondazione Bruno Kessler) Francesco Moscatelli (IOM-CNR and INFN, Perugia (IT)) Giovanni Paternoster (Fondazione Bruno KEssler) Luca Menzio (Universita e INFN Torino (IT)) Marco Ferrero (Universita e INFN Torino (IT)) Matteo Centis Vignali (FBK) Matteo Durando (Universita e INFN Torino (IT)) Maurizio Boscardin (FBK Trento) Nicolo Cartiglia (INFN Torino (IT)) Omar Hammad Ali Robert Stephen White (Universita e INFN Torino (IT)) Roberta Arcidiacono (Universita e INFN Torino (IT)) Simone Galletto (Università and INFN Torino) Tommaso Croci (INFN, Perugia Unit) Valentina Sola (Universita e INFN Torino (IT))

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