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Status of the PiN diodes irradiation tests. B. Abi ( OSU), R. Boyd (OU), P. Skubic (OU), F. Rizatdinova (OSU), K.K. Gan (Ohio State U.). Oklahoma responsibility. Our goal is to identify radiation hard high speed PiN diodes and measure their lifetime.
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Status of the PiN diodes irradiation tests B. Abi( OSU), R. Boyd (OU), P. Skubic (OU), F. Rizatdinova (OSU), K.K. Gan (Ohio State U.)
Oklahoma responsibility • Our goal is to identify radiation hard high speed PiN diodes and measure their lifetime. • High speed PiN arrays available on the market are GaAs or InGaAs. • Radiation tests performed by KK in August 2007 have revealed that most of these devices are not radiation hard.
PiN diodes in our tests • Contacted Hamamatsu to get the Si PiN diodes. • Got two types of single PiN diodes to test them this spring/summer • S9055-01 • S5973-01 • In case of success have an agreement that Hamamatsu will produce arrays for us. • In addition, purchased Hamamatsu GaAs PiN diode, G8255 • Actually there are 3 varieties of this PiN: G8255-01, G8255-02, G8255-03 • Difference is in the size of chip and in the speed
Characteristics of selected PiNs • S9055-01: • 2 GHz; • Active area d = 0.1mm; • Spectral response range 320 – 1000 nm; Peak sensitivity wavelength 700 nm; • Reverse voltage 2 V; • S5973 • 1.5 GHz; • Active area d = 0.4 mm; • Reverse voltage 3.3 V • G8522 (3 types) • for all of them reverse voltage is 2 V; • Spectral response range from 570 to 870 nm; Peak at 850 nm • G8522-01: • 3 GHz; Active area d=40 mm • G8522-02: • 1.9 GHz; Active area d=80 mm • G8522-03: • 1.5 GHz; Active area d=120 mm This information is from data sheets, available online from Hamamatsu web page
Performed irradiation tests • TID test at BNL • Total dose 10 Mrad; • Passive test; • 2 tests with protons at IUCF • 200 MeV protons; • Total dose 80 Mrad (two times of 40 Mrads); • Online readout • current of PiN diodes • Temperature was within the range 22.5-23 C°
TID test • TID test with gamma rays at BNL together with SMU performed on April 10-11. • Tested three G8255 and one S9055-01 diodes, all have been biased. • Responsivity was measured offline at 0 Mrad, 5.6 Mrad and 9.6 Mrad • Homogenous IR LED source biased by constant current was used to illuminate the PiN diodes for the responsivity measurements. • For each dose made 5 measurements, varying the optical power of the IR source from 2 to 10 mW. • Measurements were averaged to get better understanding of the true responsivity.
TID results Conclusion:No degradation has been observed for any type of tested PiNs in TID test with 10 Mrad
Test with protons at IUCF • Performed in May and June at IUCF: 200 MeV protons • Have neutron source too, can be used; • Charge $550/hour, min number of hours to purchase is 12. • Used 10 PiNs, two of each available PiN diodes • Did not package them • Did not have a possibility to do that at Oklahoma; • Used IR LED sources to illuminate PiNs • One of each type of diodes was coated with radiation hard resin, another was a bare chip • Started irradiation with very low flux, increased it gradually • Got 40 Mrad in May and 40 Mrad in June. • Still have not done full analysis of results obtained in June – will have in ~ two weeks.
Setup IR Source together with the board Board with PiN diodes Setup installed in front of the proton beam exit
Results of irradiaton test with protons • Example: Responsivity vs dose for all types of the detectors in the region between 16 and 29 Mrad. • Responsivity of all diodes coated with resin is lower compared to bare ones • The thickness of the resin varies for each type of PiN (added by hand at Oklahoma State U.)
Resin vs no resin (cont’d) Before irradiation After 40 Mrad: dark are PiNs with resin
Relative responsivity • Compare all PiNs without resin in the same dose region, from 16 to 29 Mrad • S9055-01 and G8522-02 have very similar behavior
Annealing effect • We had a 5 hours break in data taking – cyclotron was off for maintenance. • The total dose before the break was 3.7 Mrad.
Responsivityvs dose • Si S9055-01 and GaAs G8522-02 look very promising. After 40 Mrad, the responsivity went down by ~ 25%.
Preliminary results from June • In June, irradiated the same PiN diodes as in May. • Measured responsivity with the same LED before irradiation, and found that the annealing did not improve the responsivity compared to that observed after 12 hours of annealing in May. • All PiNs were biased and readout online. • Observed response from all PiNs, including GaAs PiNs. • Estimated degradation of Si 9055-01 PiNs only: • Observed ~50% responsivity after 80 MRads compared to the initial (0 Mrads) responsivity. • Did not take into account degradation of LED due to residual irradiation – preliminary estimation is that optical power of LED went down by ~10%
Lifetime test Plan to start the lifetime test of irradiated PiNs at the end of June, as soon as irradiated PiNs will be released from IUCF. Currently have a running test for single channel. Also have ready-to-use setup to test up to 64 channels simultaneously. It is online at http://139.78.127.190/AccLifeM1.01.html Monitor PiNs current and temperature. 16
Summary on tests • We developed a simple test stand for PiN responsivity studies, that allows us to avoid packaging. • TID passive test shows no degradation in PiN responsivity up to 10 Mrad; • Test with protons shows that both S9055-01 and G8522-02 are good candidates. They demonstrate 75% of their initial responsivity after 40 Mrad and 50% after 80 Mrad. • It would be good to test them at CERN this August with 24 GeV protons and make a detailed comparison. • If GaAs PiN diodes survive there will be no need to order a special production of the Si PiN arrays made of S9055-01 chips.