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Semiconductor Detectors

Semiconductor Detectors. It may be that when this class is taught 10 years on, we may only study semiconductor detectors In general, silicon provides Excellent energy resolution Excellent charge carrier collection properties Excellent position resolution (EPP)

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Semiconductor Detectors

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  1. Semiconductor Detectors • It may be that when this class is taught 10 years on, we may only study semiconductor detectors • In general, silicon provides • Excellent energy resolution • Excellent charge carrier collection properties • Excellent position resolution (EPP) • High density (versus gas e.g.) • On the negative side, they are subject to radiation damage • Semiconductor detectors are found in many fields of physical research and industry

  2. Semiconductor Detectors • Let’s look at the energy required to produce a signal • Scintillation detectors – 1 photon / 100 eV • Ionization detectors – 1 ion pair / 16 eV • Silicon detectors – 1 electron-hole pair / 3.6 eV

  3. Semiconductor Detectors • In EPP, the main use of silicon detectors is for precision tracking • Finn showed an expression for the momentum resolution of a “tracker” in a magnetic field • Additionally, silicon detectors are used for b-quark tagging • b quarks are an indication of interesting physics • t b-quarks ~ 1.5 ps • Distance traveled in lab = gct ~ 4500 mm

  4. b = distance of closest approach of a reconstructed track to the true interaction point b beam B-quark Tagging • SVT (secondary vertex tagging) • IP (impact parameter) L Secondary vertex Primary vertex

  5. B-quark Tagging

  6. Silicon • Intrinsic silicon • Egap (valence – conduction) = 1.12 eV • Intrinsic electron density n = hole density p = 1.45 x 1010/cm3 (300K) 300K=1/40 eV

  7. Silicon • Other properties of pure (intrinsic) silicon • There are alternatives to silicon • Germanium (Ge), diamond, gallium arsenide (GaAs), silicon carbide (SiC), … • But the silicon’s wide technology base makes it the usual choice for a detector

  8. Silicon

  9. Silicon • Consider an Si detector 1 cm x 1 cm x 300 mm • In this volume there will be 4.5 x 108 free charge carriers • A mip will produce 3.2 x 104 electron-hole pairs • Not a great particle detector! • In order to make a useful detector we need to reduce the number of free charge carriers

  10. Doping • n-type • Replace Si with P, As, Sb (donor) • Electrons (holes) are majority (minority) carriers

  11. Doping • p-type • Replace Si with B, Al, Ga, In (acceptor) • Holes (electrons) are majority (minority) carriers

  12. Doping • The result of doping is to increase the number of charge carriers by adding impurity levels to the band gap • n-type p-type

  13. Doping • Typical impurity concentrations are 1012-1018/ cm3 • Detector grade silicon (1012 / cm3) • Electronics grade silicon (1017 / cm3) • To be compared with silicon density of 1022 / cm3 • More heavily doped concentrations (1018-1020 / cm3) are called p+ or n+ • In nearly all cases, the impurity concentrations are large compared with the intrinsic carrier concentration (1010/cm3) • n ~ ND for n-type • p ~ NA for p-type

  14. Doping

  15. p-n Junction • Majority carriers diffuse into the boundary • Resulting exposed donor (+) and acceptor (-) atoms build up an E field that halts further diffusion • A thin (< 100 mm) depletion region (no free charge carriers) is created at the boundary • No current flows (at equilibrium)

  16. NA > ND (a)Current flow (b)Charge density (c)Electric field (d)Electrostatic potential : built in potential under zero bias p-n Junction

  17. Forward Bias p-n Junction • Positive on p side, negative on n side • The electrons can easily overcome the (~1V) contact potential • Current easily flows across the junction even for small values of forward bias voltage • The depletion region becomes smaller

  18. Reverse Bias p-n Junction • Negative on p side, positive on n side • Majority carriers are swept away from the boundary region and the depletion region becomes larger • Little current flows across the boundary • Unless the reverse bias voltage becomes large enough to overcome the space charge in the depletion region

  19. Reverse Bias p-n Junction • Most silicon detectors are reversed biased p-n junctions • The charged carrier concentration in the depletion region is now very low (~<100 / cm3) • Electron-hole pairs created by ionizing particles will be quickly swept out of the depletion region by the electric field • The motion of these electron-hole pairs constitutes the basic signal for particle detection • As in gas detectors, the electrical pulse on the electrodes arises from induction caused by movement of the electrons and holes rather than the actual collection of the charge itself

  20. Diode • p-n junction is what makes a diode • Note there is a diode “drop” of ~0.7V to get current flowing in the forward bias region • With one exception, the breakdown (Peak Inverse Voltage) region usually destroys a diode PIV

  21. anode cathode p-type n-type Diode

  22. Depletion Depth

  23. Depletion Depth

  24. Depletion Depth

  25. Depletion Depth

  26. Depletion Depth • The depletion region acts like a capacitor • It is often the case that electronic noise is the dominant noise source hence it is desirable to have the detector capacitance as small as possible • Large V and large d

  27. Semiconductor Detectors • Many varieties • Si strip detector • Si pixel detector • Si drift chamber • CCD (Charged Coupled Device) • Surface barrier • PIN photodiode • Avalanche photodiode • a-Se + TFT (Thin Film Transistor) arrays

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