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Electrical features of diamond sensors D. Drachenberg, E. Kouznetsova, W. Lange, W. Lohmann.

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Presentation on theme: "Electrical features of diamond sensors D. Drachenberg, E. Kouznetsova, W. Lange, W. Lohmann."— Presentation transcript:

1 Electrical features of diamond sensors D. Drachenberg, E. Kouznetsova, W. Lange, W. Lohmann

2 Diamond samples Fraunhofer Institute (Freiburg) : – (12 x 12 mm) –300 and 200 um –Different surface treatments : #1 – substrate side polished; 300 um #2 – cut substrate; 200 um #3 – growth side polished; 300 um #4 – both sides polished; 300 um –Metallization: 10 nm Ti + 400 nm Au

3

4 Main characteristics – initial measurements I(V) curve – leakage current –two polarities Charge collection distance – before irradiation –Sr-source –two polarities

5 I(V) dependence Extremely low currents => –Shielding –N 2 atmosphere Diamond Keithley 487 HV N2N2

6 I(V) dependence Open circuit measurements :

7 I(V) dependence Usual I(V) curve: Non-ohmic curve:

8 I(V) dependence Time dependence :

9 I(V) dependence Reproducibility:

10 IV dependence Comparison : #300VR(300V)500VR(500V)-300 VR(-300V)-500VR(-500V) 119.50E-123.16E+131.35E-113.70E+13-5.00E-126.00E+13-9.00E-125.56E+13 121.00E-123.00E+141.60E-123.13E+14-9.00E-133.33E+14-1.50E-123.33E+14 131.40E-102.14E+121.65E-093.03E+11-3.50E-108.57E+11-2.00E-092.50E+11 217.00E-134.29E+148.00E-136.25E+14-5.00E-136.00E+14-7.00E-137.14E+14 223.50E-138.57E+147.00E-137.14E+14-3.00E-131.00E+15-1.30E-123.85E+14 234.00E-137.50E+141.10E-114.55E+13-4.00E-137.50E+14-2.00E-112.50E+13 311.00E-093.00E+114.20E-081.19E+10-3.00E-091.00E+11-1.10E-074.55E+09 327.00E-124.29E+131.20E-114.17E+13-4.00E-127.50E+13-1.10E-114.55E+13 335.00E-126.00E+131.35E-103.70E+12-3.50E-128.57E+13-1.40E-113.57E+13 412.00E-101.50E+121.20E-084.17E+10-6.00E-105.00E+11-7.60E-086.58E+09 426.00E-135.00E+141.00E-125.00E+14-7.00E-134.29E+14-1.60E-123.13E+14 437.00E-124.29E+131.20E-114.17E+13-4.00E-127.50E+13-1.00E-115.00E+13

11 I(V) dependence : Current results: –Average resistance ~(10 13 -10 14 ) Ohm (ohmic behavior) –Different I(V) behaviors were obtained even within groups of the same surface treatment –I(t) dependence shows polarization effects which correspond to the hysteresis of the I(V) curves Further steps: – long term measurements – under irradiation

12 Charge collection distance measurements for diamond sensors D. Drachenberg, E. Kouznetsova, W. Lange, W. Lohmann

13 CCD & Gate PA discr delay ADC Sr 90 PM1 PM2 diamond Scint. Not irradiated samples CCD = f(HV) Both polarities Q meas. = Q created x ccd / L

14 Simulations: Sr + diamond source Mylar window diamond scintillator

15 Spectra obtained – noise and Sr signal Sr noise

16 CCD - before irradiation (1)

17 CCD - before irradiation (2)

18 CCD - before irradiation SensorR(Average) ccd Up 500V ccd Up 800V ccd Down 500V ccd Down 800V 114.60E+1337 35 123.20E+1427303543 138.88E+1121 2533 215.92E+1417 24 227.39E+14910 (700V)911 233.93E+141013912 311.04E+1133 (400V) 28 325.12E+1350 57 334.63E+1352584954 415.12E+1148 45 (400 V) 424.35E+14 435.24E+13606554

19 Simulations: Am + diamond

20 CCD –  spectra

21 CCD : Current results: –Values of CCD before irradiation: (10 - 60) um –Surface treatment has an influence on CCD –Good resistance doesn’t mean high CCD Further steps: –Measurements of CCD dependence on an irradiation dose –Surface test – measurements with an  -source (~ 10 um of penetration) –Homogeneity over the area – with a narrow collimated Sr


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