Position resolution with 25 um pitch pixel sensors before and after irradiation
I. Zoi, A. Ebrahimi, F. Feindt, E. Garutti, P. Gunnellini, A., Hinzmann, C. Niemeyer, D. Pitzl, J. Schwandt, G. Steinbr\"uck

TL;DR
This study evaluates the position resolution of 25 um pitch pixel sensors before and after irradiation, demonstrating high precision performance suitable for high-radiation collider environments like the HL-LHC.
Contribution
It provides detailed measurements of position resolution dependence on irradiation, angle, charge threshold, and bias voltage for prototype sensors used in HL-LHC upgrades.
Findings
Non-irradiated sensors achieve 3.2 um resolution.
Irradiated sensors maintain sub-6 um resolution.
Performance depends on angle, threshold, and bias voltage.
Abstract
Pixelated silicon detectors are state-of-the-art technology to achieve precise tracking and vertexing at collider experiments, designed to accurately measure the hit position of incoming particles in high rate and radiation environments. The detector requirements become extremely demanding for operation at the High-Luminosity LHC, where up to 200 interactions will overlap in the same bunch crossing on top of the process of interest. Additionally, fluences up to 2.3 10^16 cm^-2 1 MeV neutron equivalent at 3.0 cm distance from the beam are expected for an integrated luminosity of 3000 fb^-1. In the last decades, the pixel pitch has constantly been reduced to cope with the experiment's needs of achieving higher position resolution and maintaining low pixel occupancy per channel. The spatial resolution improves with a decreased pixel size but it degrades with radiation damage. Therefore,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Detector Development and Performance · Radiation Detection and Scintillator Technologies · CCD and CMOS Imaging Sensors
