11–15 Feb 2013
Vienna University of Technology
Europe/Vienna timezone

Session

Semiconductor Detectors 1

12 Feb 2013, 14:00
Vienna University of Technology

Vienna University of Technology

Gußhausstraße 25-29, 1040 Wien (Vienna), Austria

Conveners

Semiconductor Detectors 1

  • Gianluigi Casse (University of Liverpool (GB))

Semiconductor Detectors 1

  • Gianluigi Casse (University of Liverpool (GB))

Presentation materials

There are no materials yet.

  1. Anna Macchiolo (Max-Planck-Institut fuer Physik (Werner-Heisenberg-Institut) (D)
    12/02/2013, 14:00
    Talk
    A summary of the recent results of the ATLAS Planar Pixel R&D project will be given, with a focus on thin n-in-p detectors, with an active thickness from 75 μm to 200 μm, from productions of the MPI Semiconductor Laboratory, VTT and FBK-CMM. The MPI-HLL thin n-in-p pixels were interconnected using the ATLAS FE-I3 and FE-I4 read-out chips, with standard solder bump-bonding and in case of...
    Go to contribution page
  2. Clara Nellist (University of Manchester (GB))
    12/02/2013, 14:25
    Talk
    3D Silicon pixel detectors, selected to make-up 25% of the ATLAS Insertable B-Layer (IBL) and 100% of the ATLAS Forward Physics (AFP) tracking system, were studied in an intense laboratory and beam test qualification program in 2011 and 2012. The IBL is a new pixel layer which will be installed between the current ATLAS pixel detector and a new, thinner beam pipe of radius 3.2 cm during the...
    Go to contribution page
  3. Enver Alagoz (Purdue University (US))
    12/02/2013, 14:50
    Talk
    The CMS pixel detector is the innermost tracking device at the LHC, reconstructing the interaction vertices and charged particle trajectories. The current planar sensors located in the innermost layer of the pixel detector will be exposed to very high fluences which will degrade their performances. As a possible replacement of planar pixel sensors for the High Luminosity-LHC or HL-LHC, 3D...
    Go to contribution page
  4. Ms Francisca Javiela Muñoz Sánchez (IFCA (CSIC-UC), Santander,Spain)
    12/02/2013, 15:15
    Talk
    Future colliders, like High Luminosity Large Hadron Collider (HL-LHC) or future generation of colliders will deliver higher radiation doses to the detectors, specifically those closer to the beam line. The instantaneous luminosity as well as the particle fluxes at the detectors, will be increased considerably. Inner tracker detectors will be the most affected part, increasing substantially its...
    Go to contribution page
  5. Jochen Schieck (Ludwig-Maximilians-Univ. Muenchen (DE))
    12/02/2013, 16:30
    Talk
    The successful heavy flavour factory KEKB, operating between 1999 and 2010 at KEK, Tsukuba, Japan, is currently being upgraded and is foreseen to start commissioning in the fall of 2014. The new e+e- collider (SuperKEKB) will provide an instantaneous luminosity of 8x10^35 cm^2/s, 40 times higher than the current world record set by KEKB. In order to handle the increased event rate and the...
    Go to contribution page
  6. Daniela Calvo (INFN-Torino (IT))
    12/02/2013, 16:55
    Talk
    The PANDA experiment will make use of cooled antiproton beams at the future FAIR facility. The physics goals dictate basic requirements to the Micro Vertex Detector of the experiment such as the capability to resolve secondary vertices of short-lived particles, limited material budget, additional information to the global PID by energy loss meaurement. Continuous readout and radiation...
    Go to contribution page
  7. Mr Benoit CAYLAR (CEA-LIST, Diamond Sensors Laboratory (FR))
    12/02/2013, 17:20
    Talk
    We report on the fabrication and test of the first prototype of a 3D diamond detector for applications in particle physics. Polycrystalline and single-crystal CVD diamond samples have been processed with a femto-second laser to create arrays of graphitic columns with a diameter of a few microns. This 3D geometry of read-out electrodes enhances the radiation hardness due to the reduced...
    Go to contribution page
Building timetable...