Statistical investigation of the large-area Si(Li) detectors mass-produced for the GAPS experiment
M. Kozai, K. Tokunaga, H. Fuke, M. Yamada, C.J. Hailey, C. Kato, D., Kraych, M. Law, E. Martinez, K. Munakata, K. Perez, F. Rogers, N. Saffold, Y., Shimizu, K. Tokuda, M. Xiao

TL;DR
This study statistically analyzes the mass production of large-area Si(Li) detectors for the GAPS experiment, demonstrating high uniformity, stability, and the significant impact of the Li-drift process on detector performance.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive statistical and data-mining analysis of the fabrication process, revealing key factors affecting detector quality and performance.
Findings
High yield (~90%) in mass production of Si(Li) detectors.
Uniform performance parameters across detectors and strips.
Li-drift process significantly influences detector performance.
Abstract
The lithium-drifted silicon (Si(Li)) detector developed for the General Antiparticle Spectrometer (GAPS) experiment features a thick (~2.2 mm) sensitive layer, large (10 cm) diameter, and excellent energy resolution (~4 keV for 20-100 keV X-rays) at a relatively high operating temperature (approximately -40C). Mass production of GAPS Si(Li) detectors has been performed to construct a large-volume silicon tracker for GAPS. We achieved the first success of the mass production of large-area Si(Li) detectors with a high (~90%) yield rate. Valuable datasets related to detector fabrication, such as detector performance and manufacturing parameters, were recorded and collected during the mass production. This study analyzes the datasets using statistical methods with the aim of comprehensively examining the mass production and to gain valuable insight into the fabrication method. Sufficient…
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