Characterization of Chromium Compensated GaAs Sensors with the Charge-Integrating JUNGFRAU Readout Chip by Means of a Highly Collimated Pencil Beam
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Readout Chip and Test System
- Pedestal correction: Typically, all frames were corrected for an offset, called pedestal, that is mainly defined by the chip settings and the dark current integrated during the pre-defined integration time window. This pedestal is a constant value which is evaluated per pixel either before the measurement by acquiring 5000 dark frames (when a high photon occupancy is expected) or on-the-fly during the experiment in a low photon flux environment. The variation of the pedestal (in r.m.s.) corresponds to the noise of each pixel of the detector system, including contributions from the readout chip and the sensor.
- Gain correction: The output of the pixel is measured by digitizing the analog information with an off-chip ADC (analog-to-digital converter) to a unit named ADU (analog-to-digital unit). In order to convert ADU into keV, several monochromatic energy spectra were taken, the photo peak positions fitted by a Gaussian function and a pixelwise gain map extracted.
3. Results
3.1. Dark Current and Dynamic Range
- Conversion by dividing with the pixel gain (ADU/keV) (details about the procedure to obtain the pixel gain can be found in Reference [17]).
- Conversion into number of charge carriers n by using the electron-hole pair creation energy of 4.2 eV per electron-hole pair [2].
- Conversion into current by converting into C/s = A, where Qtot = n e.
3.2. Noise and Spectral Capabilities
3.3. Charge Transport Properties
3.4. Crater Effect
- Collecting electrode: For photons that are absorbed close to the readout electrode (few to several tens of microns), although there is the small pixel effect, the electrons induce only a fraction of the overall signal. Due to the relatively short drift length of the holes (compared to the sensor thickness), the hole contribution is not enough to induce the full signal (Figure 9, left—black line).
- Neighboring electrode(s): When a photon is absorbed in the proximity of the readout electrode, the electrons that drift to the collecting electrode induce a negative signal in the adjacent pixels (Figure 9, left—red/blue/green line). The holes compensate for this signal, while moving towards the backside contact. However, due to the limited drift length of the holes, the hole contribution is not sufficient to cancel the negative signal and the overall induced signal remains negative.
3.4.1. Angle-On Measurement
- Absorption in the first half of the sensor/Distance to the readout electrode = 250–500 µm: The absorption of the photons in case of pixels 1–4 happens in the first half of the sensor, i.e., the vast majority of the signal in the collecting electrode is induced by the electrons due to the small pixel effect. A photo peak in the central pixel is clearly visible at 45 keV. The diagonal line spanning from the full signal in the central pixel at 45 keV indicates events where the charge is shared with neighboring pixels. The shallower the photon absorption (Pixel 4→1), the higher the signal in the neighboring pixels at the position of the photo peak, indicating more charge sharing due to the longer drift length (Figure 10 and Figure 11). Additionally, in the case of pixels 1 and 2, escape peaks are visible, likely due to fluorescence photons that escaped through the entrance side of the sensor. Due to the limited range of the fluorescence photons, no escape peaks appear in the pixels 3 and 4. (Please note that pixel 1 was only hit close to the border of pixel 2 which explains the rather low statistics and the high amount of charge sharing).
- Absorption in the second half of the sensor/Distance to the readout electrode = 0–250 µm: The signals from the photons registered in pixel 5–8 are induced both by electrons drifting to the pixel electrode as well as holes drifting to the backside contact (the amount depends on the distance to the pixel electrode) (Figure 9, left). The signal in the central pixel decreases from (100.7 ± 0.8)% in pixel 5 to a broad peak at around (79.2 ± 2.6)% in pixel 8. The sum of the induced signals in the eight neighboring pixels also gets more negative as the absorption occurs closer to the readout electrode from (−6.9 ± 2.7)% at pixel 5 to (−36.1 ± 1.9)% in pixel 8. Notably, the spectra of the pixels 7 and 8 show escape peaks again, in this case likely by escaped fluorescence photons through the ASIC.
3.4.2. Edge-On Measurement
- Charge collection efficiency (CCE):
- Crater probability and signal height:
- Direct neighbors (L/U/R):
- Diagonal neighbors (UL/UR):
- Neighboring pixels further away (URR/RR):
- Pedestal shift:
3.5. Effective Pixel Size
4. Summary
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Mobility | Lifetime | |
---|---|---|
Electrons | 4000 cm2/(V·s) | 120 ns |
Holes | 200 cm2/(V·s) | 2.5 ns |
Pixel | Distance to Collecting Electrode (z) | Induced Signal in the Collecting Pixel | Induced Signal in the Eight Adjacent Pixels |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 500–490 µm | 100.0% | 0.0% |
2 | 500–450 µm | 100.0% | −0.1% |
3 | 450–365 µm | 99.9% | −0.7% |
4 | 365–280 µm | 99.7% | −2.0% |
5 | 280–195 µm | 99.3% | −4.3% |
6 | 195–110 µm | 98.2% | −10.5% |
7 | 110–25 µm | 91.9% | −25.1% |
8 | 40–0 µm | 77.0% | −34.4% |
GaAs:Cr (2017) (Vendor #2) | GaAs:Cr (2016) (Vendor #1) | |
---|---|---|
Dark Current Through Bulk | 13.38 µA | 25.12 µA |
Resistivity | 1.69 × 109 Ω/cm (±17.3% r.m.s.) | 0.85 × 109 Ω/cm (±15.1% r.m.s.) |
Noise (e− ENC, r.m.s) (at tint = 5 μs) | (101.65 ± 0.04) e− ENC (±9.4% r.m.s.) | (115.93 ± 0.03) e− ENC (±5.5% r.m.s.) |
FWHM (60 keV) | 2.58 keV or 4.3% | 4.14 keV or 6.9% |
(µ·τ) e (by Hecht) | (4.730 ± 0.003) × 10−4 cm2/V | (1.831 ± 0.002) × 10−4 cm2/V |
CCE at U HV,Sensor = −300 V | 98.2% | 96.0% |
Hole Lifetime τh | 2.5 ns | 1.4 ns |
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Greiffenberg, D.; Andrä, M.; Barten, R.; Bergamaschi, A.; Brückner, M.; Busca, P.; Chiriotti, S.; Chsherbakov, I.; Dinapoli, R.; Fajardo, P.; et al. Characterization of Chromium Compensated GaAs Sensors with the Charge-Integrating JUNGFRAU Readout Chip by Means of a Highly Collimated Pencil Beam. Sensors 2021, 21, 1550. https://doi.org/10.3390/s21041550
Greiffenberg D, Andrä M, Barten R, Bergamaschi A, Brückner M, Busca P, Chiriotti S, Chsherbakov I, Dinapoli R, Fajardo P, et al. Characterization of Chromium Compensated GaAs Sensors with the Charge-Integrating JUNGFRAU Readout Chip by Means of a Highly Collimated Pencil Beam. Sensors. 2021; 21(4):1550. https://doi.org/10.3390/s21041550
Chicago/Turabian StyleGreiffenberg, Dominic, Marie Andrä, Rebecca Barten, Anna Bergamaschi, Martin Brückner, Paolo Busca, Sabina Chiriotti, Ivan Chsherbakov, Roberto Dinapoli, Pablo Fajardo, and et al. 2021. "Characterization of Chromium Compensated GaAs Sensors with the Charge-Integrating JUNGFRAU Readout Chip by Means of a Highly Collimated Pencil Beam" Sensors 21, no. 4: 1550. https://doi.org/10.3390/s21041550
APA StyleGreiffenberg, D., Andrä, M., Barten, R., Bergamaschi, A., Brückner, M., Busca, P., Chiriotti, S., Chsherbakov, I., Dinapoli, R., Fajardo, P., Fröjdh, E., Hasanaj, S., Kozlowski, P., Lopez Cuenca, C., Lozinskaya, A., Meyer, M., Mezza, D., Mozzanica, A., Redford, S., ... Zhang, J. (2021). Characterization of Chromium Compensated GaAs Sensors with the Charge-Integrating JUNGFRAU Readout Chip by Means of a Highly Collimated Pencil Beam. Sensors, 21(4), 1550. https://doi.org/10.3390/s21041550