20–22 Feb 2017
FBK, Trento
Europe/Zurich timezone

Diamond detector technology; status and perspectives

20 Feb 2017, 11:10
20m
Aula Grande (FBK, Trento)

Aula Grande

FBK, Trento

Via Santa Croce, 77 38122 Trento ITALY

Speaker

Harris Kagan (Ohio State University (US))

Description

At present most experiments at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC)
are planning upgrades in the next 5-10 years for their innermost
tracking layers as well as luminosity monitors to be able to take data
as the luminosity increases and CERN moves toward the High Luminosity-LHC
(HL-LHC). These upgrades will require radiation tolerant technologies up
to a total fluence of ~2x10$^{16}$ particles/cm$^2$. As a result all LHC experiments are undergoing intense research programs on radiation tolerant technologies and geometries. Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD) diamond has been
used extensively and successfully in beam conditions/beam loss monitors
as the innermost detectors in the highest radiation areas of essentially
all LHC experiments. The startup of the LHC in 2015 brought a new
milestone where the first diamond pixel modules were installed in an LHC
experiment (ATLAS) and successfully began taking data. As a result,
this material is now being discussed as a possible sensor material
for tracking very close to the interaction region and for pixelated
beam conditions/beam loss monitors of the LHC/HL-LHC upgrades where
the most extreme radiation conditions will exist.

The RD42 collaboration at CERN is leading the effort to use CVD diamond
as a material for tracking detectors operating in extreme radiation
environments. During the last three years the RD42 group has succeeded
in producing and measuring a number of devices to address specfic issues
related to use at the HL-LHC. We will present status of the RD42 project with
emphasis on recent beam test results. In particular we present the latest
results on material development, the most recent results on the independence
of signal size on incident particle rate in poly-crystalline CVD
diamond pad and pixel detectors over a range of particle fluxes up to
20 MHz/cm$^2$ measured, and results from first 3D diamond detectors which
produce an extremely radiation tolerant device and collect nearly all of
the charge deposited in the material. In addition we will present the plans
for future use of the most recent devices.

TRACK Technology

Primary authors

Harris Kagan (Ohio State University (US)) for the RD42 Collaboration

Presentation materials