Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 2 Primary Ionization Track (Gases) incoming particle ionization track  ion/e - pairs Argon DME n (ion pairs/ cm ) 25 55 dE/dx.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
General Characteristics of Gas Detectors
Advertisements

Radiation Detection ionization chambers (dosimeters, pulse chambers, particle track chambers) scintillation detectors semiconductor detectors photographic.
CHAPTER 4 CONDUCTION IN SEMICONDUCTORS
Lecture #5 OUTLINE Intrinsic Fermi level Determination of E F Degenerately doped semiconductor Carrier properties Carrier drift Read: Sections 2.5, 3.1.
Geiger-Muller detector and Ionization chamber
Dispersive property of a G-M tube HV - + In the proportional region a G-M tube has dispersive properties tube voltage.
Experimental Particle Physics PHYS6011 Joel Goldstein, RAL 1.Introduction & Accelerators 2.Particle Interactions and Detectors (1/2) 3.Collider Experiments.
Drift velocity Adding polyatomic molecules (e.g. CH4 or CO2) to noble gases reduces electron instantaneous velocity; this cools electrons to a region where.
Radiation Detectors / Particle Detectors
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
Electrical Techniques MSN506 notes. Electrical characterization Electronic properties of materials are closely related to the structure of the material.
Semiconductor Physics - 1Copyright © by John Wiley & Sons 2003 Review of Basic Semiconductor Physics.
Principles of Radiation Detection
Proportional Counters
Lesson 17 Detectors. Introduction When radiation interacts with matter, result is the production of energetic electrons. (Neutrons lead to secondary processes.
Ionization. Measuring Ions A beam of charged particles will ionize gas. –Particle energy E –Chamber area A An applied field will cause ions and electrons.
Detectors. Measuring Ions  A beam of charged particles will ionize gas. Particle energy E Chamber area A  An applied field will cause ions and electrons.
MatE/EE 1671 EE/MatE 167 Diode Review. MatE/EE 1672 Topics to be covered Energy Band Diagrams V built-in Ideal diode equation –Ideality Factor –RS Breakdown.
Radiation Safety level 5 Frits Pleiter 02/07/2015radiation safety - level 51.
Main detector types Scintillation Detector Spectrum.
Unit-II Physics of Semiconductor Devices. Formation of PN Junction and working of PN junction. Energy Diagram of PN Diode, I-V Characteristics of PN Junction,
Radiation Sensors Zachariadou K. | TEI of Piraeus.
Lecture 3. Intrinsic Semiconductor When a bond breaks, an electron and a hole are produced: n 0 = p 0 (electron & hole concentration) Also:n 0 p 0 = n.
Radiation Detection and Measurement II IRAD 2731.
Detectors The energy loss of particles in matter can be used detect and identify those particles. There are different types of “detectors”: - Gas-filled.
EE415 VLSI Design The Devices: Diode [Adapted from Rabaey’s Digital Integrated Circuits, ©2002, J. Rabaey et al.]
Lecture 25: Semiconductors
Chapter 6 Photodetectors.
Semiconductor detectors
References Hans Kuzmany : Solid State Spectroscopy (Springer) Chap 5 S.M. Sze: Physics of semiconductor devices (Wiley) Chap 13 PHOTODETECTORS Detection.
Why silicon detectors? Main characteristics of silicon detectors: Small band gap (E g = 1.12 V)  good resolution in the deposited energy  3.6 eV of deposited.
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.
PHYS40422: Applied Nuclear Physics Paul Campbell Room Interaction of Radiation with Matter 2.Radiation Detection.
Radiation Detectors W. Udo Schröder, Detector Design Principles Ionization chambers (gas and solid-state) Proportional counters Avalanche counters.
Particle Detectors for Colliders Ionization & Tracking Detectors
FISICA AMBIENTALE 1 Radioattività: misure 2 Lezioni Marie Curie.
Techniques for determination of deep level trap parameters in irradiated silicon detectors AUTHOR: Irena Dolenc ADVISOR: prof. dr. Vladimir Cindro.
Tools for Nuclear & Particle Physics Experimental Background.
Basic Electronics By Asst Professor : Dhruba Shankar Ray For B.Sc. Electronics Ist Year 1.
Radiation Detectors W. Udo Schröder, Detector Design Principles Ionization chambers (gas and solid-state) Proportional counters Avalanche counters.
NEEP 541 Ionization in Semiconductors - II Fall 2002 Jake Blanchard.
CJ Barton Department of Physics INTAG Meeting – GSI – May 2007 Large Acceptance Bragg Detector at ISOLDE.
GERMANIUM GAMMA -RAY DETECTORS BY BAYAN YOUSEF JARADAT Phys.641 Nuclear Physics 1 First Semester 2010/2011 PROF. NIDAL ERSHAIDAT.
SILICON DETECTORS PART I Characteristics on semiconductors.
References Hans Kuzmany : Solid State Spectroscopy (Springer) Chap 5 S.M. Sze Physics of semiconductor devices (Wiley) Chap 13 PHOTODETECTORS.
GEM: A new concept for electron amplification in gas detectors Contents 1.Introduction 2.Two-step amplification: MWPC combined with GEM 3.Measurement of.
ECEE 302: Electronic Devices
Ionization Detectors Basic operation
Silicon Detectors and DAQ principles for a physics experiment Masterclass 2011, 7-11 February 2011 Alessandro Scordo.
Semiconductor Devices Lecture 5, pn-Junction Diode
Introduction to semiconductor technology. Outline –4 Excitation of semiconductors Optical absorption and excitation Luminescence Recombination Diffusion.
Introduction to Semiconductors
MOS Device Physics and Designs Chap. 3 Instructor: Pei-Wen Li Dept. of E. E. NCU 1 Chap 3. P-N junction  P-N junction Formation  Step PN Junction  Fermi.
NEEP 541 Ionization in Semiconductors Fall 2002 Jake Blanchard.
Particle Detectors for Colliders Semiconductor Tracking Detectors Robert S. Orr University of Toronto.
Ion signals with R134a and R134 in a parallel plate proportional counter Y. Onel, E. Norbeck, J. E. Olson University of Iowa For HCAL meeting at Fermilab.
Semiconductor Device Physics
CSE251 CSE251 Lecture 2 and 5. Carrier Transport 2 The net flow of electrons and holes generate currents. The flow of ”holes” within a solid–state material.
3/2003 Rev 1 II.3.5 – slide 1 of 23 IAEA Post Graduate Educational Course Radiation Protection and Safe Use of Radiation Sources Session II.3.5 Part IIQuantities.
Multiple choise questions related to lecture PV2
An extension of Ramo's theorem to include resistive elements
Electronics & Communication Engineering
Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste
Photodetectors.
Radiation Detectors : Detection actually means measurement of the radiation with its energy content and other related properties. The detection system.
Ionization detectors ∆
Semiconductor Detectors
PHYS 3446 – Lecture #16 Monday ,April 2, 2012 Dr. Brandt
Why silicon detectors? Main characteristics of silicon detectors:
Presentation transcript:

Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 2 Primary Ionization Track (Gases) incoming particle ionization track  ion/e - pairs Argon DME n (ion pairs/ cm ) dE/dx (keV/cm) GAS (STP) Xenon CH Helium Minimum-ionizing particles (Sauli. IEEE+NSS 2002) Statistical ionization process: Poisson statistics Detection efficiency  depends on average number of ion pairs thickness  Argon GAS (STP) 1mm91.8 2mm 99.3 Helium 1mm45 2mm 70 Higher  for slower particles e-e- I+I+ E  n Linear

Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 3 Free Charge Transport in Gases x P(x) t0t0 x t 1 >t 0 x P(x) t 2 >t 1 1D Diffusion equation  P(x)=(1/N 0 )dN/dx D diffusion coefficient, mean speed   mean free path Thermal velocities : Maxwell+Boltzmann velocity distribution Small ion mobility

Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 4 Driven Charge Transport in Gases x P(x) t0t0 t 1 >t 0 x P(x) t 2 >t 1 Electric field E =  U/  x separates +/- charges x P(x) E x Cycle: acceleration – scattering Drift and diffusion depend on field strength and gas pressure p (or ).

Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 5 Ion Mobility GAS ION µ + (cm 2 V -1 s +1 Ar Ar CH 4 CH Ar+CH CH Ion mobility   = w + /E Independent of field, for given gas at p,T=const. Typical ion drift velocities (Ar+CH 4 counters): w + ~ (10 -2 – ) cm/s slow! E. McDaniel and E. Mason The mobility and diffusion of ions in gases (Wiley 1973)

Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 6 Electron Transport Multiple scattering/acceleration produces effective spectrum P()  calculate effective and  : Simulations Electron Transport: Frost et al., PR 127(1962)1621 V. Palladino et al., NIM 128(1975)323 G. Shultz et al., NIM 151(1978)413 S. Biagi, NIM A283(1989)716 w - ~ 10 3 w +

Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 7 Stability and Resolution Anisotropic diffusion in electric field (D perp >D par ). Electron capture by electro+negative gases, reduces energy resolution T dependence of drift: w/w  T/T ~ p dependence of drift: w/w  p/p ~ Increasing E fields  charge multiplication/secondary+ ionization  loss of resolution and linearity  Townsend avalanches

Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 8 Electronics: Charge Transport in Capacitors Charges q + moving between parallel conducting plates of a capacitor influence t- dependent negative images q + on each plate. t U If connected to circuitry, current of e - would emerge from plate, in total proportionally to charge q +. q+q+ q+q+ q+q+ conducting plates Electronics R e+e+

Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 9 Signal Generation in Ionization Counters Primary ionization: Gases I  eV/IP, Si: I  3.6 eV/IP Ge: I  3.0 eV/IP Energy loss  n= n I =n e = /I number of primary ion pairs n at x 0, t 0 Force: F e = -eU 0 /d = -F I Energy content of capacitor C: Capacitance C + - U0U0  U(t) 0 x0x0 x d R CsCs

Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 10 Time-Dependent Signal Shape t 0 t e ~s t I ~ms t U(t) Drift velocities (w + >0, w - <0) Total signal: e & I components Both components measure  and depend on position of primary ion pairs x 0 = w - (t e -t 0 ) Use electron component only for fast counting.

Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 11 Frisch Grid Ion Chambers 0 d FG x0x0 d x Anode/FG signals out cathode Suppress position dependence of signal amplitude by shielding charge-collecting electrode from primary ionization track. Insert wire mesh (Frisch grid) at position x FG held constant potential U FG. e - produce signal only when inside sensitive anode-FG volume, ions are not “seen”.  not x dependent. x-dependence used in “drift chambers”. particle

Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 12 isobutane 50T Bragg-Curve Sampling Counters Sampling Ion chamber with divided anodes E/x x Sample Bragg energy-loss curve at different points along the particle trajectory improves particle identification.

Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 13 IC Performance E residual (channels) E (channels) ICs have excellent resolution in E, Z, A of charged particles but are slow detectors. Gas IC need very stable HV and gas handling systems. Energy resolution F<1 Fano factor

Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 14 Solid-State IC Solids have larger density  higher stopping power dE/dx  more ion pairs, better resolution, smaller detectors (also more damage, max dose ~ 10 7 particles i Semiconductor n-, p-, i- types Si, Ge, GaAs,.. (for e -,lcp, , HI) Band structure of solids: E EFEF Valence Conduction + - e-e- h+h+ Ionization lifts e - up to conduction band  free charge carriers, produce U(t). Bias voltage U 0 creates charge-depleted zone U0U n p U(t) c R

Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 15 Particles and Holes in Semi-Conductors Fermion statistics: 0  FF Valence Band Conduction Band e-e- h+h+ GG VV CC Small gaps  G (Ge)  large thermal currents. Reduce by cooling.

Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 16 Semiconductor Junctions and Barriers Need detector with no free carriers. Si: i-type (intrinsic),n-type, p-type by diffusing Li, e - donor (P, Sb, As), or acceptor ions into Si. Trick: Increase effective gap  Junctions diffuse donors and acceptors into Si bloc from different ends. Diffusion at interface  e - /h + annihilation  space charge  Contact Potential and zone depleted of free charge carriers  Depletion zone can be increased by applying “reverse bias” potential Similar: Homogeneous n(p)-type Si with reverse bias U 0 also creates carrier-free space d n,p : up to 1mm possible o o o n p e-e- h+h+ Donor Acceptor ions space charge Si Bloc e - Potential d

Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 17 Surface Barrier Detectors Metal film Silicon wafer Metal case Insulation Connector EFEF Junction Metal CB Semi conductor VB Different Fermi energies adjust to on contact. Thin metal film on Si surface produces space charge, an effective barrier (contact potential) and depleted zone free of carriers. Apply reverse bias to increase depletion depth. Ground +Bias Front: Au Back: Al evaporated electrodes Insulating Mount depleted dead layer Possible: depletion depth ~ 100 dead layer d d  1 V ~ 0.5V/ Over-bias reduces d d ORTEC HI detector

Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 18 Charge Collection Efficiency Heavy ions: E deposit > E app = apparent energy due to charge recombination, trapping. Light ions E deposit  E app Typical charge collection times: t~(10-30)ns Moulton et al. Affect also collection time  lower signal rise time.

Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 19 Ge ray Detectors Ge detectors for -rays use p-i-n Ge junctions. Because of small gap E G, cool to -77 o C (LN 2 ) Ge Cryostate (Canberra) Ge cryostate geometries (Canberra)

Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 20 Properties of Ge Detectors: Energy Resolution Size=dependent mall detection efficiencies of Ge detectors  10%  solution: bundle in 4- arrays GammaSphere, EuroBall, Tessa,… Superior energy resolution, compared to NaI E  ~ E  =100keV

Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 21 Townsend Gas Amplification Radiation U0U0 I d U0U0 M IC Region Non- linear Region Amplification M

Avalanche Formation Townsend Coefficient Electron-ion pairs through gas ionization Electrons in outer shells are more readily removed from atom. Ionization energies are smaller for heavier elements.

Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 23 Sparking and Spark Counters  /p  Impact ionization Probability  Prevent spark by reducing  for ions: collisions with large organic molecules  quenching d - +

Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 24 Avalanche Quenching in Argon A. Sharma and F. Sauli, Nucl. Instr. and Meth. A334(1993)420 Reduce and energy of ions by collisions with complex organic molecules (CH4, …). Excitation of rotations and vibrations already at low ion energies

Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 25 Effective Ionization Energies Mean energy per ion pair larger than IP because of excitations Large organic molecules have low-lying excited rotational states  excitation without ionization through collisions  quenching additives

Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 26 Amplification Counters Single-wire gas counter U0U0 C counter gas gas signal

Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 27 Proportional Counter Anode wire: small radius R A  50  m or less Voltage U 0  ( ) V counter gas e - q + RARA RIRI eU I R I Anode Wire Avalanche R I  R A, several mean free paths needed Pulse height mainly due to positive ions (q + ) U0U0 C gas signal R RcRc

Oct 2001 W. Udo Schröder 28 Pulse Shape t t UU UU long decay time of pulse  pulse pile up, summary information differentiate electronically, RC- circuitry in shaping amplifier, individual information for each event (= incoming particle) R C event 1 event 2 event 4 event 1 event 2 event 4