Introduction
To begin with, we have chosen this topic due to the fact that silicon radiation detectors are one of the main type of particle detectors used in the radiation detection industry nowadays. Hence, it is crucial for an engineer in this field to know the history of silicon production as well as the development process and concrete examples of the different types of detectors.
In this wiki page we are studying the rapid progress of the silicon radiation detectors, the design of the single sided stereo angle silicon strip detector, cadmium telluride (CdTe) and cadmium zinc telluride (CdZnTe) or CZT pixel detectors and the development of the detectors in Finland. The information was collected from Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers/Institution of Electrical Engineers (IEEE/IEE) Electronic Library online.
History of silicon radiation detectors
According to Rehak (2003), silicon is the main material which is used in electronics and radiation detection industries. Moreover, there was a rapid development in the field of silicon radiation detectors in the last decade, which could be noted as a considerable progress after 1982, when planar technology was invented. [1.] Furthermore, according to Orava et al (2007), even today new development activity is initiated with introduction of 3D detector technologies, active edge silicon processing and other perspective inventions in the field. [3.] It has to be said that there is always interaction between electronics industry and silicon radiation detectors because they both use silicon as the main component. The main point is that silicon used for radiation detectors should have 3-4 times more resistivity and lower density of traps than the one used for electronics. [1.]
Interestingly, almost all radiation detectors before 1982 were lithium-drifted (Figure 1). Lithium doping was used in order to increase the thickness of the detector and thus to decrease the capacitance and apply reasonable voltages which would lead to lower noise levels.
Figure 1. Lithium drifted silicon detector. Reprinted from Rehak (2003) [1,2494].
However, the main disadvantage was the instability of the surfaces along the field of the detector and working temperature of about 77K. Obviously, silicon radiation detectors which could be used at room temperature were drastically needed. [1.]
Planar technology was introduced in 1982, which led to the rapid progress in development of the silicon detectors. Among others, strip detectors were invented and matched to meet the requirements of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) developed at The European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN). Main advantages were lower noise, smaller capacitance, room working temperature, easier production, reduced cooling requirements and larger area coverage. [1;3]
Strip silicon radiation detectors
Strip silicon detectors consist of n type material while having p type aluminium strips on the surface which are separated by a thin insulator. At the same time there is an electric field between the p strips and the n type material. When a radiation particle passes the detector, silicon atoms are ionized and free electrons leave these atoms with an electron vacancy (holes). After they reach the p type strip they are collected and then create a charge on the aluminium strip which is possible to be measured with special electronics.
Orava et al (2007) proposes a new type of the strip silicon detector (Figure 2) which implements cross-connected short strips interlaced by long strips. The main advantage is that better measuring resolution is achieved, which requires much less accuracy [3].
Figure 2. Layout of the single sided stereo angle silicon strip detector. Reprinted from Orava et al (2007) [3,227].
Furthermore, detector is designed in a way that every second strip is long while short strips are crossing them which helps to register particles at better angles to the surface of the sensor. Consequently, the high efficiency and proper special resolution are achieved. [3].
CdTe and CdZnTe pixel detectors
Cadmium telluride (CdTe) is a stable crystalline compound composed from cadmium and tellurium. Doped with a small amount of Zn it produces cadmium zinc telluride, (CdZnTe) or CZT.
CdTe and CdZnTe pixel detectors are implementing in imaging systems which are widely used in medical diagnostics (mammography, dental phantoms), astronomy, and industrial research.
CdTe and CdZnTe pixel detectors are very appealing due to their high energy resolution at normal conditions which is not high enough in currently implementing materials [4, 1]. Another advantage of those detectors is their perfect efficiency while working with X-ray energy spectrum as well as compatibility with gamma rays, alpha and beta particles [5, 3].
Nowadays, there are two ways of using CdTe/CZT detectors. The first one is focused on single channel detectors which are used in X- and gamma- ray spectroscopy. The second is proposed for multi-channel devices in nuclear medicine mostly. [5, 26]
Materials and manufacturing technologies
- Does it contain Silicon? Is the structure crystalline or polysilicon?
Strip silicon detectors consist of n type material while having p type aluminium strips on the surface which are separated by a thin insulator.
- Are metals used? Which ones? Why?
aluminium strips
- How about ceramics?
yes
- Why some materials are more favorable than others in your sensor or application?
- How is the sensor manufactured?
- What are the typical manufacturing process steps?
Silicon micromachining
Photolithography
Silicon radiation detectors characteristics
As an example, we have considered datasheets of 2 sensors. Those are DT Standard Photodiode Products [7] and First Sensor PIN PD [8].
Radiation detectors are usually very high sensitive, though the exact value is not defined. It can be improved by depressing noise signals which appear from e.g. light. Manufacturing material's quality is very important in sensitivity rise.
Although It is impossible to set the exact mathematical equation to introduce the transfer function of the sensors (nor do the datasheets give any transfer functions), it can be defined after measuring and analyzing spectrum.The maximum efficiency for both sensors is achieved at 10 keV energy level (Figure 3, Figure4).
Figure 3. X-ray Efficiency vs. Energy in XRB series Diodes. Reprinted from http://www.deetee.com [7].
Figure 4. Absorption of gamma radiation. Reprinted from http://www.marubun.co.jp [8].
To evaluate radiation sensor it is important to consider its major characteristics:
- Active area
- Dark current
- Capacitance
- Shunt resistance
Moreover, it is necessary to notice the operation characteristics to avoid the breakage of the sensor. Operating voltage and temperature, as well as storage temperature are crucial (Figure 5, Figure 6).
Figure 5. XRB 100s-CB380 characteristics. Reprinted from http://www.deetee.com [7].
Figure 6.First Sensor PIN PD characteristics. Reprinted from http://www.marubun.co.jp [8].
Interface electronic circuits
As almost all other sensors, radiation detectors need to be interfaced before being able to process the data. An interface or a signal conditioning circuit has a specific purpose: to bring the signal from the sensor up to the format which is compatible with the load device [10]. Cremat Inc. radiation detection electronics can be used with a wide range of detectors, including compound semiconductor radiation detectors, scintillator-photodiode detectors, avalanche photodiodes etc [9].
Typical interface electronic circuit using Cremat amplifiers is presented in Figure 7.
Figure 7.General shematic. Copied from http://www.cremat.com [9].
The Cremat's CR-110 is a single channel charge sensitive preamplifier module intended for use with various types of radiation detectors including semiconductor detectors. Bias voltage can be used if required. Radiation is detected as a series of pulses, resulting in fast bursts of current (from 1ns to few µs) flowing into preamplifier input. After the series of amplifiers it flows into the Cremat's CR-200 Gaussian shaping amplifier. The CR-200 is a single channel shaping amplifier, which is processing the signals from charge sensitive preamplifiers. It accepts a step-like input pulse and produces an output pulse shaped like a Gaussian function (Figure 8). [9.]
Figure 8. CR-200 input and output pulse shapes. Copied from http://www.cremat.com [9].
The main aim of this is to filter the noise from the signal and to provide a quickly restored baseline. The CR-200 shaping amplifiers have low output impedance (<5 Ohms) and can source/sink 10 mA of output current. CR-110 output impedance is 50 Ohms.[9.]
The whole circuit is presented as commercially available PCBs: CR-150 evaluation board and CR-160 Gaussian shaping amplifier evaluation board (Figure 9, Figure 10).
Figure 9. CR-150 evaluation board. Copied from http://www.cremat.com [9].
Figure 10. CR-160 Gaussian shaping amplifier evaluation board. Copied from http://www.cremat.com [9].
The CR-160 includes an adjustable low-noise wide-band amplifier having gains adjustable from 0 to 100. Combined with the CR-200-X gain of 10, this allows an overall gain of 0 to 1000. Furthermore, an inverted-polarity signal is available, as well as adjustments for pole-zero correction and DC offset.[9.] In order to calibrate the sensor there is a number of potentiometers: Fine Gain to adjust the gain from 0 to 100; Pole-Zero to adjust the baseline of the output; Offset Adjustment; Signal Polarity;
The whole system has analog nature without any conversion to digital format. A/D conversion is typically happening in PC or various embedded systems. For instance, pulse height analyzer (PHA) is an instrument used in nuclear and elementary particle physics research which accepts electronic pulses of varying heights from particle and event detectors, digitizes the pulse heights, and saves the number of pulses of each height in registers or channels for later spectral analysis.
Last but not least, there is a possibility to read out the radiation signal when multichannel detectors are used using application-specific integrated circuits (ASIC). An example is AGIPD: Adaptive Gain Integrated Pixel detector (Figure 11).
Figure 11. AGIPD detector. Copied from http://indico.cern.ch/event/137337/material/slides/0?contribId=10&sessionId=5 [11].
AGIPD detector consists of 64x64 pixels sensor array which is connected to ASIC circuit (Figure 12).
Figure 12. ASIC readout circuit. Copied from http://indico.cern.ch/event/137337/material/slides/0?contribId=10&sessionId=5 [11].
Inside the ASIC there are added capacitors which help to minimize the noise. The stored analog value is multiplexed and transferred then to ADCs. After that the signal is proceed to column bus from where it goes to DAQ system. [11.]
Development in Finland
Today there are two big companies which implement CdTe/CZT detectors in Finland.
AJAT Ltd. designs and manufacture imaging systems based on those detectors. They use new mechanism of straight conversion on the signal from detector to read out CMOS chips. AJAT products are integrated by OEM partners from different areas: from medicine and dental care to industrial 3D imaging. [6].
Examples of AJAT products:
• ART Plus Panoramic Imaging System (Dental care)
• Industrial CT and laminography for inspection of pipes in nuclear power stations (Industry)
• Bone densitometry (Medicine). [6].
VTT is the second company which uses CdTe/CZT detectors. They provide patterning method of the thick diffused junctions on as well as Hybrid CdTe-CMOS Semiconductor Radiation Detectors. Unfortunately, VTT do not disclose their patents’ information widely so there are only basic properties of the technology are known.
VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland has been developing strip silicon radiation detectors for many years. What is more, VTT have been closely working with CERN which conducts the most important experiments on particle physics in the world.
Wafer is a very thin slice of silicon crystal which is used to produce the actual detectors. The production line at VTT can make wafers up to 200 mm in diameter using planar technology. Furthermore, the thickness of the strip detectors is only 150 μm or 300 μm which can be implemented for different bias configurations. Area of the detectors is from 5 x 5 cm2 to 1 x 1 cm2. Interestingly, the modern fabrication techniques such as etching, planarization, lithography and bonding are applied. The most important thing is that leakage currents of the detectors are under few nanoamperes, which makes it acceptable for radiation detection. [2].
References
Rehak, P. ; Brookhaven Nat. Lab., Upton, NY, USA. Silicon radiation detectors [online]. Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record, 2003 IEEE (Volume:5 ); 19-25 Oct. 2003, 2492-2497.
URL: http://ieeexplore.ieee.org.ezproxy.metropolia.fi/stamp/stamp.jsp?tp=&arnumber=1352629, Accessed 16 March 2014.
Virolainen, T. ; Kamarainen, V. ; Ji, F. ; Garcia, F. ; Orava, R. ; van Remortel, N. ; Santala, M. Silicon radiation detector development at VTT [online]. Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record, 2007. NSS '07. IEEE (Volume:2 ); Oct. 26 2007-Nov. 3 2007, 1494-1497.
URL: http://ieeexplore.ieee.org.ezproxy.metropolia.fi/stamp/stamp.jsp?tp=&arnumber=4437282, Accessed 16 March 2014.
Huhtinen, M. ; Res. Inst. for High Energy Phys., Helsinki, Finland ; Orava, R. ; Pimia, M. ; Tuuva, T. Single sided stereo angle silicon strip detector [online]. Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on (Volume:40 , Issue: 4 ); Aug 1993, 227-229.
URL: http://ieeexplore.ieee.org.ezproxy.metropolia.fi/stamp/stamp.jsp?tp=&arnumber=256575, Accessed 16 March 2014.
- Yossi Eisen, Asher Shor, Israel Mardor (2004) CdTe and CdZnTe X-Ray and Gamma-Ray Detectors for Imaging Systems. IEEE transactions on nuclear science; June 2004, Val. 51, No. 3.
URL: http://ieeexplore.ieee.org.ezproxy.metropolia.fi/stamp/stamp.jsp?tp=&arnumber=1312040&tag=1, Accessed 17 March 2014.
- Tom Schulman (2006) Si, CdTe and CdZnTe radiation detectors for imaging applications. University of Helsinki, Finland; June 19, 2006.
- AJAT Ltd. official webpage
URL: http://www.ajat.fi/, Accessed 17 March 2014.
- Detection Technology Oy official webpage
URL: http://www.deetee.com/en_US/home.html, Accessed 5 April 2014.
- Marubun Corporation official webpage
URL: http://www.marubun.co.jp/product/measurement/sensor/8ids6e000000k1lh-att/X100-7SMD.pdf, Accessed 5 April 2014.
- Cremat Inc. official webpage
URL: http://www.cremat.com/ , Accessed 10 April 2014.
- Jacob Fraden–3rd ed. Handbook of modern sensors : physics, designs, and applications. Springer-Verlag New York, Inc., USA; 2004
- Integrated Digital conference Official website. International Workshop on Semiconductor Pixel Detectors for Particles and Imaging. Hotel Listel Inawashiro, Inawashiro, Japan; 2-9 Spt. 2012.
URL: http://indico.cern.ch/event/137337/material/slides/0?contribId=10&sessionId=5