Title :
Keeping Capacitance Small: The Quest to Integrate Electronics on High-Resistivity, Fully Depleted Detectors
Author :
Sampietro, Marco
Author_Institution :
Dipartimento di Elettronica e Informazione, Politecnico of Milano, Milano, 20133, Italy
Abstract :
It was 1983 when the first experimental result proved that it was possible
to produce a semiconductor detector of virtually any area (even as big as
a wafer) and sensitive throughout the whole volume but with a tiny, low-capacitance
collecting electrode. The device was fully depleted of carriers, as in a reverse
junction single diode but through the full wafer thickness, and the generated
carriers are drifted in a controlled way toward the collecting electrode.
At that time, the device was called a silicon drift chamber (SDC), and it
was the realization of a long-pursued dream of the scientists
working in the detector field: to create a large detector, simple in operation,
but still able to take advantage of the highest possible energy resolution
obtainable through such a low-capacitance contact. This class of detectors,
allowing position reconstruction of the interaction event with micrometer
position resolution and precise charge reconstruction of the released energy
within a few electrons, is indeed one of the greatest achievements of the
career of Emilio Gatti and the best product of his deep and fruitful scientific
and personal collaboration with Pavel Rehak of Brookhaven National Laboratory
in Upton, New York.
Keywords :
Capacitance; Detectors; Electrodes; Energy resolution; JFETs; Logic gates; Semiconductor devices;
Journal_Title :
Solid-State Circuits Magazine, IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/MSSC.2012.2203190