The Cryogenic AntiCoincidence detector for ATHENA X-IFU: assessing the role of the athermal phonons collectors in the AC-S8 prototype
Matteo D'Andrea, Claudio Macculi, Andrea Argan, Simone Lotti, Gabriele, Minervini, Luigi Piro, Michele Biasotti, Dario Corsini, Flavio Gatti, Guido, Torrioli

TL;DR
This paper evaluates the AC-S8 Cryogenic Anticoincidence detector prototype for the ATHENA X-IFU, demonstrating that aluminum finger networks significantly improve athermal phonon collection and pulse response speed.
Contribution
It introduces an enhanced detector design with aluminum fingers that increases athermal phonon collection efficiency and ensures fast pulse response, advancing CryoAC technology.
Findings
Athermal phonon collection increased from 6% to 26%.
Aluminum fingers prevent quasiparticle recombination.
Fast pulse rise times achieved.
Abstract
The ATHENA X-ray Observatory is the second large-class mission in the ESA Cosmic Vision 2015-2025 science programme. One of the two on-board instruments is the X-IFU, an imaging spectrometer based on a large array of TES microcalorimeters. To reduce the particle-induced background, the spectrometer works in combination with a Cryogenic Anticoincidence detector (CryoAC), placed less than 1 mm below the TES array. The last CryoAC single-pixel prototypes, namely AC-S7 and AC-S8, are based on large area (1 cm2) Silicon absorbers sensed by 65 parallel-connected iridium TES. This design has been adopted to improve the response generated by the athermal phonons, which will be used as fast anticoincidence flag. The latter sample is featured also with a network of Aluminum fingers directly connected to the TES, designed to further improve the athermals collection efficiency. In this paper we…
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