Silicon carbide diodes for neutron detection
Jos\'e Coutinho, Vitor J. B. Torres, Ivana Capan, Tomislav, Brodar, Zoran Ere\v{s}, Robert Bernat, Vladimir Radulovi\'c and, Klemen Ambro\v{z}i\v{c}, Luka Snoj, \v{Z}eljko Pastuovi\'c, Adam, Sarbutt, Takeshi Ohshima, Yuichi Yamazaki, Takahiro Makino

TL;DR
This paper reviews silicon carbide-based neutron detectors, discussing their material properties, fabrication challenges, and experimental performance, highlighting recent advancements and ongoing potential to replace helium-3 detectors.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of SiC neutron detectors, including experimental results, defect analysis, and the development of Schottky barrier devices within the E-SiCure project.
Findings
Schottky barrier SiC detectors show promising sensitivity.
Identification of defect-related limitations in SiC active areas.
Successful testing of detectors with thermal neutron converter layers.
Abstract
In the last two decades we have assisted to a rush towards finding a He3-replacing technology capable of detecting neutrons emitted from fissile isotopes. The demand stems from applications like nuclear war-head screening or preventing illicit traffic of radiological materials. Semiconductor detectors stand among the stronger contenders, particularly those based on materials possessing a wide band gap like silicon carbide. We review the workings of SiC-based neutron detectors, along with several issues related to material properties, device fabrication and testing. The paper summarizes the experimental and theoretical work carried out within the E-SiCure project, co-funded by the NATO SPS Programme. Among the achievements, we have the development of successful Schottky barrier based detectors and the identification of the main carrier life-time-limiting defects in the SiC active areas,…
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