Title: Advances in CMOS Solid-state Photomultiplier Detectors
1Advances in CMOS Solid-state Photomultiplier
Detectors
Christopher Stapels, RMD Inc., 44 Hunt St
Watertown, MA 02472
- Topic Outline
- Low light detection and detectors
- Radiation spectroscopy with SSPMs
- Component integration
- Advanced devices
2Low light detection
- Biology (fluorescence detection, fluorescence
lifetime imaging bacteria, DNA, and spore
detection) - Chemistry (chemiluminescence, laser spectroscopy)
- Physics (Particle detection, radiation
monitoring) - Border Security, automotive sensors, personal
dosimetery, optical signaling (telecom) - Space Solar particle monitoring and Dosimetry
3Low light detectors
- PMT low dark current, high gain, Vacuum, large
form factor, low QE, high voltage - Photodiode small form factor, low power, low
gain, high noise - CCD High QE, high fill factor, low gain, slow
readout, not CMOS compatible - APD medium gain, large area, small form factor
medium noise, excess noise, dark current, high
voltage - SSPM High gain, small form factor, CMOS
compatible, low power, dark noise,
excess noise, fill factor limits.
4Geiger Photodiodes
- Geiger photodiode Avalanche photodiode biased
above reverse bias breakdown voltage - Integrated resistor provides passive quenching
- Each individual pixel has a binary output
- Large gain (gt106), fast rise time
5Solid-State Photomultiplier
- Parallel array of Geiger Photodiodes is an SSPM
Solid-State Photomultiplier - SSPM output is proportional to the number of
photons detected - Low power, small form factor, robust detector
- CMOS fabrication provides process control and
cost gains with quantity
6SSPM-based Spectrometer
- Scintillator illuminates high-gain photodetector
- SSPM provides spectral information
- Solid-state solution eliminates PMT
- CMOS environment allows on-chip integration of
readout components
7Radiation Detection
- Particle detection determined by scintillator
material - High-energy charged particles, gamma-rays,
neutrons
8 Signal output
- Signal size depends on
- Nttl Number of incident photons
- QE Quantum efficiency
- Pg Geiger probability (excess bias)
- CJ Junction capacitance (temperature)
- VA-VBExcess bias (temperature)
p - n well - p-epi
9SSPM Noise Sources
- Readout noise (negligible due to high gain)
- Dark noise from thermally generated events (not
time correlated) - Excess noise
- Crosstalk
- After pulsing
- Gain fluctuations
?nd? number from dark ?nt? total pixels
triggered
10Integrated Signal Processing
- Comparator at each pixel controls gain
fluctuations - Pulse height determined by comparator, not excess
bias - Adjustable gate output allows integration and
reduced afterpulsing
11Photon Counting
- Clearly delineate from 0 to 200 photons
(compared to 30 without conditioning)
12Circuit integration
- Dosimeter on-a-chip
- 300 conditioned pixels
- Seven 16-bit counters and a slow clock
- Pulse height determination
- Temperature feedback
SSPM
Encoder
Out MUX
RAM
32-bit chip
13Large Area Devices
- 10 x 10 mm monolithic device, 46 fill factor
- 50k pixels for large dynamic range
- Integrated temperature monitor
14Position Sensitive Devices
- Provides position sensitivity using charge
division on four readout wires - 50 mm position resolution
15Back Illumination Improved active area
- 3 mm x 3 mm devices thinned to 50 mm and 20 mm.
- Surface scan with focused illumination shows fill
factor improvement - Dark count rate unaffected
Bulk Si
P-epi
16Back Illumination Improved QE
Depth (mm)
- Quantum efficiency increase shifts to shorter
wavelengths - Net improved QE in long wavelengths from FF and
QE improvement - Front side Etalon effect removed
17Summary
- Single photon detectors in CMOS can work for low
light detection applications - CMOS environment allows integrated processing and
ancillary circuitry - SSPMs can allow low cost nuclear spectroscopy on
a chip - Fill factor and sensitivity improvements expected
18Acknowledgement
- NASA, DOE, DOD, and NIH
- CMOS layout by Augustine Engineering
Jim Christian, Erik Johnson, Eric Chapman,
Sharmistha Mukhopadhyay, J Chen, Mikel McClish,
Kanai Shah, Purushottam Dokhale
Instrument Research Development
19Low T
Instrument Research Development
20Dosimeter on a chip
- Pulse-height information required for accurate
calculation of dose - Dosimeter-on-a-chip distills and stores pulses in
on-board RAM
241Am 60 keV 57Co - 122 keV
22Na 511 keV
32-bit chip