1 / 18

Radiation Damage Effects in the NA60 Silicon Pixel Detectors

Radiation Damage Effects in the NA60 Silicon Pixel Detectors. The NA60 Experiment The NA60 Silicon Pixel Detector Predictions of Radiation Damage Fluence in the 2003 physics run Leakage Current Depletion Voltage Measurements in the 2003 Physics Run Depletion Voltage Leakage Current

tyler
Télécharger la présentation

Radiation Damage Effects in the NA60 Silicon Pixel Detectors

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Radiation Damage Effects in the NA60 Silicon Pixel Detectors • The NA60 Experiment • The NA60 Silicon Pixel Detector • Predictions of Radiation Damage • Fluence in the 2003 physics run • Leakage Current • Depletion Voltage • Measurements in the 2003 Physics Run • Depletion Voltage • Leakage Current • Predictions for 2004 • Summary Markus Keil, CERN

  2. NA50 melting of directly produced J/ ? Questions Left Open by Previous SPS Experiments • What is the origin of the intermediate mass dimuon excess ?Thermal dimuons produced from a QGP phase ? • Is the open charm yield enhanced in nucleus-nucleuscollisions ? How does it compare to the suppressionpattern of charmonium states ? • Which physics variable drives the onset of ’, c andJ/ suppression ? Energy density ? Cluster density ? • What is the normal nuclear absorption pattern of the c ? NA50 melting ofcc? New and better measurements are needed ! Markus Keil, CERN

  3. Beam Tracker vertex tracker Pixels Overview of the NA60 Experiment Muon Spectrometer 2.5 T dipole magnet beam ZDC +Quartz Blade Interaction Counter Muon track matching through the absorber m vertex pm offset } < 1 mm Micro-Strips D m Muon track offset measurement :Separate charm from prompt dimuons Markus Keil, CERN

  4. The Silicon Pixel TelescopePhysics Run 2003, 158 GeV/nucleon Indium Beam on Indium Targets • Beam tracker, target and silicon pixel telescope in the dipole magnet gap in front of the hadron absorber ×8 ×8 Markus Keil, CERN NA60 pixel detector planes.

  5. The Silicon Pixel Detector • Single chip assemblies: • ALICE1LHCb readout chips • Deep submicron, radhard design • Tested up to 12 Mrad • ALICE Pixel sensors • p-on-n silicon • 15kWcm • Assemblies placed around beam hole ( 6 mm) Markus Keil, CERN

  6. Physics Run 2003 • 158 GeV/nucleon Indium ions on Indium targets • Beam Intensity measured with beam tracker • In total ~ 5·1012 ions on 20% lint target Markus Keil, CERN

  7. Simulation of the Radiation Dose • Back of the envelope calculation from simulation of charged tracks • Strong R-dependence • Weak Z-dependence • Fluence of several 1013 in the innermost pixels • Difference of a factor 10 within one sensor chip Markus Keil, CERN

  8. Radiation Damage, Expectations • Leakage current: • Growing with accumulated beam intensity. Higher for pixels closer to the beam axis (like the fluence). • Depletion voltage: • Depletion voltage decreases; faster for pixels close to the beam axis. • After a certain fluence, bulk converted to p-type material. This will happen earlier for the pixels close to the beam axis while for the outer pixels it might not occur at all. • The depletion voltage of the type-inverted pixels will rise; again faster for the pixels close to the beam axis. Markus Keil, CERN

  9. Damage Prediction: Reverse-bias Currrent Complete Plane: Single Pixels: • Leakage current should reach ~50µA per Plane, ~10 nA in the worst pixels (at 20°C) Markus Keil, CERN

  10. Damage Prediction:Depletion Voltage Outermost pixels, not yet type-inverted Pixels that are just at the point of type-inversion Inner, type-inverted, pixels with rising depletion voltage Markus Keil, CERN

  11. Fluence Measurement • Dosimeter plane placed inside the vertex telescope at Z=40 cm • Measurements done with help from M. Moll and M. Glaser (CERN PH/TA1) • Measurement with Al activation (22Na) • Agrees well with track simulation • Measurement with Si pin diodes • Much higher fluence measured • Slow neutrons? (not seen by Al measurement and Track simulation) • FLUKA Simulation • Includes slow, back-scattered particles • Much better agreement with pin diodes • Of course agreement to this level is coincidence, however, we can be confident that our estimates are in the right ball-park Markus Keil, CERN

  12. 150 V 50 V 80 V 60 V 100 V 40 V 30 V Measurement of Depletion Voltage • Assumption: After type inversion only fully depleted pixels work (original p-on-n pixels  p-on-p after type inversion) • Simulation: Bias voltage should increase for smaller radii • Lowering the bias voltage should leave an ever larger area undepleted (i.e. not working) • Occupancy Measurements at decreased bias voltage Markus Keil, CERN

  13. Normalised Occupancy • Occupancy divided by occupancy at full depletion (150V) • No change in the outer pixels • Close to the beam axis the occupancy drops Type inverted, undepleted pixels • The radius of the drop increases for lower bias voltage Depletion voltage depends on the radius To get a quantitative measure: Interpret 50% point (erf-fit) as radius where Udep = 40 V Markus Keil, CERN

  14. Depletion Voltage vs. Radius • Bias voltage scan, radii extracted as described before • Qualitative behaviour Udep(R) agrees well with simulation • Quantitative disagreement similar to the one observed in the fluence measurement Markus Keil, CERN

  15. Measurement of Leakage Current • Leakage current and temperature measured throughout the whole run • After temperature correction (I  T2 exp( -Egap / 2kT) ) the leakage current follows very nicely the integrated beam intensity Markus Keil, CERN

  16. Fluence Expected for pA Run in 2004 • 2004: High intensity protonn run (~10 weeks) • Fluence of 1013neq/cm2/week expected • Up to now everything working fine, but spare planes ready to be exchanged Markus Keil, CERN

  17. A Really Damaged Plane (September 2004) • The „worst“ plane at a bias voltage of 30 V • Online plot from this year‘s proton run • Large number of pixels type inverted • But: still working fine at high enough depletion voltage (250 V) Markus Keil, CERN

  18. Summary • A silicon pixel telescope has been operated in a harsh radiation environment. • Fluences of several 1013 neq/cm2 have been accumulated in 2003, and similar doses in 2004. • A simple occupancy measurement can make the effect of type inversion visible. • The change of depletion voltage and reverse-bias current are similar to the expectations. • Up to now the telescope is working fine, although the initially p-in-n type sensors are partially type inverted. Markus Keil, CERN

More Related