Silicon pixel detectors with some info also on Strip and Drift detectors.
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Transcript of Silicon pixel detectors with some info also on Strip and Drift detectors.
Silicon pixel detectorswith some info also on Strip and Drift detectors
Summary
• What is a silicon pixel detector and how it works
• Sensors and readout electronics
• Tests and irradiation studies
• From single modules to complex detectors
• A study case: The ALICE silicon vertex detector
Main Features
• Two-dimensional segmentation detectors
• Required for high quality vertexing capabilities
(primary and secondary vertices, impact parameter,
…)
• Sizes of row and colums adapted to the needs
Column
Row
Main Features
• Basic structure: a two-dimensional matrix (detector
ladder) of reverse-biased silicon detector diodes (sizes:
tens - hundreds of microns) flip-chip bonded to readout
electronic chips
• Each cell on the detector matrix is bonded to an
equivalent cell on a CMOS chip, which contains most of
the required electronics for that channel
• Usually only binary information provided, with a
selectable threshold
Main Features
• Production of practical silicon pixel detectors made
possible by the R&D progress in
• component density achievable in CMOS electronic
chips
• development in flip-chip bonding techniques
Advantages vs disadvantages
• Advantages:
• True two-dimensional segmentation
• Geometrical precision
• Double-hit resolution
• High signal-to-noise ratio
• High speed
• Disadavantages:
• Only digital information
• Large increase in number of connections and electronic channels
• Fabrication techniques still in progress
• Several phases of the process critical
The hybrid pixel detector
Cell size: 50 x 425 microns
Thickness around 200 + 200 microns
The hybrid pixel detector
A matrix of 8192 (32 x 256) independent cells is envisaged for each individual pixel chip in ALICE
1200 chips ~ 10 M channels
Electronic readout
• Sensible progresses achieved in the number of
channels, response uniformity, individual cell
control and radiation tolerance
Evolution of the readout pixel chip families
Omega 3 (WA97/NA57)Omega 2 (WA97/NA57)
ALICE2 TestALICE1 Test
Development of the readout electronics
Prototype Cell size No. of cells Technology
Omega 2 75 x 500 16 x 63 3
Omega 3 50 x 500 16 x 127 1
ALICE1 test 50 x 420 2 x 65 0.5
ALICE2 test 50 x 420 2 x 65 0.25
ALICE1 50 x 425 32 x 256 0.25
Bump-bonding techniques
The expected radiation dose
Evaluation of the expected dose in the ALICE ITS by GEANT and FLUKA simulations taking into account 10 years operational period
Layer type Cumulated dose (krad)
1 pixel 130
2 pixel 40
3 drift 13
4 drift 5
5 strip 2
6 strip 1.5
Irradiations of the readout electronics
List of irradiations tests carried out on the ALICE readout chips
From single modules to complex detectors
• To build a large detector with many channels
several problems must be solved
• ALICE: about 10 M channels
• ATLAS: about 100 M channels
From single modules to complex detectors
• Mass production organization
• Mechanics and assembly
• Cooling
• Beam tests
• Installation procedure
• ...
Mass production after R&D
• After an extensive period of R&D, a mass production
activity must be organized:
• sensors and electronics chip tests
• qualification criteria
• time schedule
• efficiency evaluation
• ...
ALICE silicon pixel detector: a case study
Wafer test procedures
For ALICE each wafer has 86 readout chips
Tests to be carried out on each chip:
• Current consumption (analog/digital)• JTAG functionality• Scan of all DACs• Determination of minimum threshold• Complete threshold scan of pixel matrix
Wafer probing
MB-card
Power Supply VME-cratewith pilot and JTAG controller
Bridge to PC
Power Supply
Probe Station with Probe Card
CLEAN ROOM
Wafer probing: hardware
Semiautomatic Probe Station
Electronics
Wafer probing: software
LabView-based programs
Analysis with Root/C++
Typical results from a chip
Threshold distribution
A mean threshold of 17 mV corresponds to about 900 electrons.
Noise Distribution
A mean noise of 2.3 mV corresponds to about 120 electrons.
Readout CHIP classification
35 (41%)14 (16.5%)36 (42%)30 (35%)III
5 (6%)8 (9%)8 (9%)10 (12%)II
37 (43%)64 (74.5%)36 (42%)46 (53%)I
AV9VGWTAZ9VETTAB9VHXTAM9VG4TCLASS
Chips classified as Class I (to be bump-bonded), Class II (minor defects), Class III (major defects)
CHIP classification
Minor Defects (CLASS II):
• parts or whole columns are missing (no test-column effect!) • many noisy pixels (>1%)• inefficient pixels (>1%)• high threshold or noise (th> 30mV, noise>3mV)
Chips for Bump Bonding (CLASS III):
• threshold<30mV (~2000 electrons rms)• no missing columns or parts of columns• no excess in current consumption• less than 1% of faulty pixels (noisy, inefficient)• test-column effect ignored
Beam tests at the CERN SPS
Bench
2 scintillators
1 large scintillator
1 scintillator
x-y table
Layout of the experimental set-up for ALICE pixel detector beam tests
plane 1 plane 2 plane 3
The ALICE pixel project
The ALICE pixel project requires joint efforts from physicists, engineers, technicians,…
A (not exhaustive) list of items under way or finalized:
Development of front-end chip
Bump bonding and assembly techniques
Carrier Bus development
Electronics for control and data transfer
Carbon fiber mechanics
Hardware and software alignment
Cooling system
Test of detectors under beam
Simulation tools for detector response
...
Conclusions
Silicon pixel detectors are now widely used in LHC experiments
Only recently the process of building a large detector is entirely reliable
There is room for further progresses in the field
New applications of pixel detectors (Medicine, …) are being exploited
Silicon strip detectors
• Basic motivation: charged particle position measurement– Use ionization signal (dE/dx) left behind by charged particle passage
++
++
__
__
– In a solid semiconductor, ionization produces electrons-hole pairs. For Si need 3.6 eV to produce one e-h pair. In pure Si, e-h pairs quickly recombine need to drift the charges to electrodes … but how?
– Use the drift chamber analogy: ionization produces electron-ion pairs, use an electric field to drift the electrons and ions to the oppositely charged electrodes.
Principles of operation
• Charge collection– Need to isolate strips from each other
and collect/measure charge on each strip high impedance bias connection (resistor or equivalent)
– Usually want to AC couple input amplifier to avoid large DC input currents
– Both of these structures are often integrated directly on the silicon sensor. Bias resistors via deposition of doped polysilicon, and capacitors via metal readout lines over the implants but separated by an insulating dielectric layer (SiO2 , Si3N4).
+
–
h+ e-
Principles of operation
• Magnitude of collected charge – Usually specified in terms of
minimum ionizing deposition:
(dE/dx)Si = 3.88 MeV/cm, for 300m thickness 116 keVThis is mean loss, for silicon detectors use most probable loss (0.7 mean) 81 keV
3.6 eV needed to make e-h pairMax collected charge 22500 e(=3.6fC)
Mean chargeMost probable charge ≈ 0.7 mean
Principles of operation
– Diffusion of charge “cloud” caused by scattering of drifting charge carriers, radius of distribution after time td:
• Charge collection time, diffusion
– Drift velocity of charge carriers v=E, so drift time, td = d/v = d/E
– Typical values: d=300 m, E= 2.5kV/cm, e= 1350 cm2 / V·s, h= 450 cm2 / V·s, so td(e)= 9ns , td(h)= 27ns
= 2Dtd , where D is the diffusion constant, D=kT/q
– Same radius for e and h since td 1/
– Typical charge radius: ≈ 6m, could exploit this to get better position resolution due to charge sharing between adjacent strips (using centroid finding), but need to keep drift times long (low field).
Principles of operation
• Double-sided detectors pp p
n
– This is possible and is often done but is not as simple as it might seem.
– Problem: unlike the face with the p-strips, nothing prevents charge to spread horizontally on the back face.
Obvious question: why not get a 2nd coordinate by measuring the position of the (electron) charge collected on the opposite face?
Principles of operation
• Position resolution: strip pitch and read-out pitch
If one treats the detected charge in a binary way (threshold discrimination), the resolution is simply:
= p/ 12
As mentioned earlier, if the charge distribution is shared between adjacent strips, can use centroid finding to improve this resolution. However, since typical charge distribution sizes are of order 5-10 m this implies quite fine strip pitch. In fact it is not practical to make sensors of pitch less than 20m and most are greater.
Test devices have been made that have achieved < 3.0m (using read-out pitch of 25 m), this is near the limit on precision determined by diffusion and statistical fluctuations of the ionizing energy deposition.
Read-out electronics pitch limit is 50m and time/cost constraints often argue for even larger read-out pitches. Fortunately there is a trick to preserve resolution with larger read-out pitch...
Performance
• Position resolution: capacitive charge division
If one reads out only every nth strip but preserves the signal magnitude, the charge gets shared such that the centroid resolution is nearly that obtained by reading out every strip. The limitation is that some signal is lost (capacitive coupling to the backplane) and noise is a bit higher (more input capacitance) and one loses two track separation capability.
This is clearly an economic solution in the case of low occupancy and has been used extensively. It does require a good signal/noise ratio, our next topic.
Performance
• Signal to noise ratio (S/N)– Why is it important?
Landau distribution has significant low energy tail which becomes even lower with noise broadening.
Landau distribution
with noise
noise distribution
One usually has low occupancy in silicon sensors most channels have no signal. Don’t want noise to produce fake hits so need to cut high above noise tail to define good hits. But if too high you lose efficiency for real signals. The centroid determination is also degraded by poor signal to noise.
• Signal– Basic signal produced is ≈ 22500 e– Typical losses of 5-10% depending on the nature of the
chosen electrical network (AC coupling capacitor, stray capacitances and resistances) and front-end electronics.
Performance
Summary
Silicon strip detectors- Built on simple p-n junction diode principle, now a “mature” technology- Widespread use and cost drop thanks to microelectronics industry- Many options and design possibilities- Replaces wire chambers in high radiation
Silicon drift detectors
The transport of electrons, in a direction parallel to the surface of the detector and along distances of several cm, is achieved by creating a drift channel in the middle of the depleted bulk of a silicon wafer. At the edge of the detector, the electrons are collected by an array of small size anodes.
The measured drift time gives information on the particle impact point coordinate y. The charge sharing between anodes allows the determination of the coordinate along the anode direction x.
x
y
Principles of operation
P+
P+P+
P+P+P+P+
P+P+P+
P+
n+
n+
n+
n+++- --
Particle
Principles of operation
Large scale applications
Large scale applications of such detectors require low cost, high quality and high production yields
Silicon Drift Detectors are now in operation or planned as part of LHC experiments
Average spatial precision r /z 38 /28 m
Cell size 150 x 300 m
Detector area 72.5 x 75.3 mm
Total number of readout channels 133 K
Total number of cells 34 M
SDD in ALICE