21
Timing in Thick Silicon Detectors Andrej Studen, University of Michigan, CIMA collaboration

Timing in Thick Silicon Detectors Andrej Studen, University of Michigan, CIMA collaboration

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Motivation Thick silicon detectors improve efficiency for gamma-ray detection. In a coincident setup (PET, Compton camera) good timing resolution is required. Experimental data not promising [1]. Could it be compensated by different readout strategy and bias conditions? [1] N. Clinthorne et al. Timing in Silicon Pad Detectors for Compton Cameras and High Resolution PET; IEEE NSS/MIC, Portoriko, 2006

Citation preview

Page 1: Timing in Thick Silicon Detectors Andrej Studen, University of Michigan, CIMA collaboration

Timing in Thick Silicon DetectorsAndrej Studen, University of Michigan, CIMA collaboration

Page 2: Timing in Thick Silicon Detectors Andrej Studen, University of Michigan, CIMA collaboration

Outline Motivation Timing in pad detectors Two intuitive solutions Comparison to measured data Where to go from here

Page 3: Timing in Thick Silicon Detectors Andrej Studen, University of Michigan, CIMA collaboration

Motivation Thick silicon detectors improve efficiency for gamma-ray detection. In a coincident setup (PET, Compton camera) good timing resolution is required. Experimental data not promising [1]. Could it be compensated by different readout strategy and bias conditions?

[1] N. Clinthorne et al. Timing in Silicon Pad Detectors for ComptonCameras and High Resolution PET; IEEE NSS/MIC, Portoriko, 2006

Page 4: Timing in Thick Silicon Detectors Andrej Studen, University of Michigan, CIMA collaboration

Model application Silicon pad sensors used in Compton & silicon PET experiments at UofM: p+-n-n+, 256/512 pads Pad size 1.4 x 1.4 mm2, Thickness: 1 mm, FDV: 150 V (!), ASIC: VATAGP3:

Charge sensitive pre-amplifier CR-RC shaper with 200 ns shaping time. Leading edge discriminator.

Page 5: Timing in Thick Silicon Detectors Andrej Studen, University of Michigan, CIMA collaboration

Signal formation in a pad detector

Charge q moving in electric field induces current pulse on readout electrode:

P-side

N-sideelectrons

holes

+-

Compton scattering or photo-absorption

~100 um (E gamma)

gamma-rayRecoil electron

Readout electrode

)( EEvE wqw qqI Signal shape depends on:

Electric fieldRamo fieldInteraction depth

Page 6: Timing in Thick Silicon Detectors Andrej Studen, University of Michigan, CIMA collaboration

Electric field Thickness (1mm) « lateral dimension (12/24 mm by 48 mm).

P-n junction. Large field

region.Charges are

fast.

Low field region. Charges move slowly.

Page 7: Timing in Thick Silicon Detectors Andrej Studen, University of Michigan, CIMA collaboration

Ramo Field Pad size ~ depth. Asymmetry.

Large Ramo field. Large

contribution to current pulse.

Low field region. Charges contribute less.

Page 8: Timing in Thick Silicon Detectors Andrej Studen, University of Michigan, CIMA collaboration

Interaction depth Two regions: Near region:

Large E field, Large Ramo, Fast rise-time.

Far region: Small E field, Small Ramo, Slow rise-time.

Very sensitive because of short electron path.

Asymmetry of both fields works against us.

Page 9: Timing in Thick Silicon Detectors Andrej Studen, University of Michigan, CIMA collaboration

Example: single e-h pair at pad edge, 1.4 VFD

Far region fZ=0.9

Near region fZ=0.1

Detector

Trigger time shift

Preamp, CR-RC; t=200 ns

Leading edge trigger

Page 10: Timing in Thick Silicon Detectors Andrej Studen, University of Michigan, CIMA collaboration

Solution 1:Adding adjacent pads

Reducing Ramo asymmetry. Noise of 9 pads added – jitter increased 3 x

Page 11: Timing in Thick Silicon Detectors Andrej Studen, University of Michigan, CIMA collaboration

Solution 2:Increasing bias

Much shorter times w/ higher bias Often unpractical

Page 12: Timing in Thick Silicon Detectors Andrej Studen, University of Michigan, CIMA collaboration

Simulation overview GEANT4 used to generate “true” paths of recoil electrons 661 keV photons; 137-Cs (also measured) Voltages from 200 V -> 400 V Both single and summed pads

Page 13: Timing in Thick Silicon Detectors Andrej Studen, University of Michigan, CIMA collaboration

Results overview

Threshold: 15 keV (experiment). Time-walk: Dominates below ~ 100 keV: Could be compensated by appropriate

readout strategy. Three levels assumed for illustrative

purposes.

Page 14: Timing in Thick Silicon Detectors Andrej Studen, University of Michigan, CIMA collaboration

Comparison to measurements

Measured in Compton mode (PMT start, silicon stop; PMT timing resolution ~ 10 ns)

Sharp edge

Blunt edge

Spurious tail

Page 15: Timing in Thick Silicon Detectors Andrej Studen, University of Michigan, CIMA collaboration

Comparison, U=400 V Simulation marginally better, measurement data more symmetric. Spurious tail gone.

Page 16: Timing in Thick Silicon Detectors Andrej Studen, University of Michigan, CIMA collaboration

Solution simulation

RAMO9 pads200 V

BIAS400 V1 pad

Page 17: Timing in Thick Silicon Detectors Andrej Studen, University of Michigan, CIMA collaboration

Latest greatestDo both!

Page 18: Timing in Thick Silicon Detectors Andrej Studen, University of Michigan, CIMA collaboration

Conclusions Shape of Ramo field has a significant influence on timing in thick silicon detectors. Solutions: Multi-pad readout (noise!), Different detector geometries (strips?) Different trigger strategies. Operate at higher bias voltages.

Page 19: Timing in Thick Silicon Detectors Andrej Studen, University of Michigan, CIMA collaboration

Backup slidessubtitle

Page 20: Timing in Thick Silicon Detectors Andrej Studen, University of Michigan, CIMA collaboration

Illustration of depth-related trigger time variation

15 % trigger, 1.4 VFD

70 ns60 ns50 ns40 ns30 ns20 ns

Single pad 9 pad sum

Page 21: Timing in Thick Silicon Detectors Andrej Studen, University of Michigan, CIMA collaboration

Illustration (cont’d) 15% threshold, 1.4 VFD

Single Pad 9 pad sum