Title: ALCPG, UTArlington
1Preliminary Investigations of Geiger-mode
Avalanche Photodiodes for use in HEP Detectors
- David Warner, Robert J. Wilson
- Department of Physics
- Colorado State University
2Outline
- Motivation
- Avalanche Photodiodes
- Characteristics
- RD Plans
- Conclusions
3Motivation
- Scintillating fiber, or WLS readout of
scintillator strips basic component of several
existing detectors (MINOS, CMS-HCAL) - Standard photodetector photomultiplier tubes,
great devices but - Expensive (including electronics etc.),
- Bulky, magnetic field sensitive
- For the next generation would like a photon
detector to be - Cheaper
- Compact? Low mass? Magnetic field insensitive?
Radiation hard? - Future experiments
- BaBar upgrade - endcap?
- Future ee- Linear Collider? LHC?
- Nuclear physics? Space-based (NASA)?
4Silicon Avalanche Photodiodes (APD)
- Solid state detector with internal gain.
- Avalanche multiplication
- initiated by electron-hole free carriers,
thermally or optically generated within the APD - accelerated in the high electric field at the APD
junction. - Proportional Mode
- bias voltage below the breakdown voltage, low
gain - avalanche photocurrent is proportional to the
photon flux and the gain - Geiger Mode
- bias voltage higher than the breakdown voltage,
gain up to 108 from single carrier - avalanche triggered either by single photon
generated carriers or thermally generated
carriers - signal is not proportional to the incident photon
flux. - high detection efficiency of single carriers ?
single photon counter - to quench Geiger mode avalanche bias has to be
decreased below the breakdown voltage
5UV Enhanced Avalanche Photodiodes
- Development by Stefan Vasile et al, Radiation
Monitoring Devices, Inc. Cambridge,
Massachusetts, USA. (Now at aPeak, Newton, Mass.)
- Small Business Innovative Research (SBIR) award
motivated by an imaging Cerenkov device
application (focusing DIRC). c. 1996/97-98 - Design and fabrication of silicon micro-APD
(mAPD) pixels - 20-180 µm pixels, single photon sensitivity in
the 200-600Â nm wavelength range. - Q.E. 59 at 254 nm (arsenic doping, thermal
annealing) - very high gain gt 108
- Geiger mode APD array with integrated readout
designed but process/funding problems.
blue-infrared
UV-blue
6Geiger Avalanche Characteristics
- Thermal carriers trigger avalanche
- dark count rate decreased using small APD space
charge region generation volume - Compatible with 5 volt logic
- strong noise rate dependence
- Temperature dependence
- ? factor 3 decrease for 25C to 0C
- ? factor 20 decrease for 25C to -25C
- Size dependence
- roughly linear with effective avalanche region
area - at room temp. predict few kHz for 100 mm, ? 100
kHz for 500 mm - Characteristics measured on a small number of
samples
20 mm diameter pixel, room temp.
RMD Inc.
7Photon Detection Efficiency
RMD Inc.
RMD Inc.
8(No Transcript)
9Prototype mAPD Array
RMD Inc.
- APD active area is 150 mm x 150 mm on 300 mm
pitch - Compatible with CMOS process ? potential for low
cost large-scale production - 70 photon collection efficiency with fused
silica micro-mirrors (for f-DIRC) - Fabrication attempt failed 1998/99. RMD claims to
have solved the problems but no funds for a
fabrication run.
10MINOS Scintillation System
- Uses a large volume of cheap co-extruded
scintillator bars (8m x 4cm x 1cm) with a single
1.2mmØ Y11-175 multiclad WLS fiber epoxied in
extruded groove - WLS fiber is coupled to a long clear fiber and
readout with a pixelated pmt - 3-4 pe/fiber at 3.7 m including connections and
pmt QE - Several production facilities still operational
Source BaBar IFR Upgrade Status Report III
11BaBar Modifications (SLAC/CalTech)
- Short (3.7m vrs 8m) version of MINOS system with
Time to the get the second coordinate - Replace the pmt with (low gain) APD 4X higher
QE - Increase number of fibers to 4 2X more light
- Increase scintillator thickness to 2cm 1.5X
more light - Project 50-60 pe at 3.7m for min. ion.
Source BaBar IFR Upgrade Status Report III
12CSUSLAC Commissioned RD at aPeak
- P.o. placed December 2002
- 3.1. Package GPD pixels
- Wire bonding
- Breadboard passive quenching circuitry and GPD
pixels. - 3.2. Reliability evaluation
- Bias several pixels at 1.1V above breakdown for
1,000 hours, document changes in dark count rate,
and failure modes, if any. - 3.3. GPD performance evaluation
- dark count rate vs. T40 to 30 C
- recovery time vs. pixel area determine if one
microsecond recovery time can be achieved with
passive quenching - Gain vs. Temp. and bias Voltage
- Detection Efficiency _at_ Room Temp.
- 3.4. Optical interface fabrication and assembly
- Fab. and evaluate 4x1 beam couplers using GRIN
and/or tapered fibers - 3.5. Test GPD in Cosmic Ray Setup
1350 mm diameter GPD layout
Proprietary. Do not distribute.
14Recovery Time with Passive Quenching.
1 x 10 mm GPD
10 ms
475 mV
- Simple electronics -limiting resistor
- 10 ms quench time
15Recovery Time - Active Quenching
1 ms
Design 1
2.75 V
0.5 ms
Design 2
325 mV
Trade off pulse amplitude with pulse width
(quench the avalanche sooner)
16Active Quenching - New Design
Design 3
100 ns
Preliminary
1.2 V
17Temperature Dependence
18T (C)
Detection Efficiency
- 10 mm f gAPD
- 550 nm, 150 ns laser, 10 kHz
- Avg. 7 photons/pulse
- DE (Illuminated Rate - Dark Rate)/10 kHz
DE
-43
Preliminary
-43
-32
-30
-24
Preliminary
-20
-20
-13
2
2
9
23
23
T (C)
Nominal operating voltage
19Optical coupling to small diameter pixels
- Couple 4 x 1.2 mm WLS fibers to 4 x 1mm glass
fibers - Draw 4 glass fiber into single fiber, various
exit diameters - Investigate light transmission efficiency
D
d
Concentration Factor, CF Area of input
aperture (A) / Area of photodetector (a) Coupler
Transmission Factor, TF Intensity at input
aperture / Intensity at output aperture
20Optical couplers area reduction
Transmission Factor
ratio of areas
Concentration Factor, CF
Concentration Factor, CF
- Benefit from tapered fibers compared to ratio of
areas is not dramatic ? 50-200 - Preliminary measurements at aPeak are in general
agreement with the model - We expect to get samples at CSU soon
21Test Setup at CSU
Portable dark box
- Cosmics rays
- Calibrated with well-understood PMT at CSU
- Measure efficiency with gAPDcouplers
Initial Tests
22gAPD Progress Summary
- SLACCSU initiated a p.o. to jumpstart further
gAPD work at aPeak. - New design from aPeak claims to be a more
reliable process than the old one. - Detection efficiency in 10 micron pixels ?15 at
room temp., ? 25 at 40C (kHz dark count
rate). - Only modest dark count reduction with lower
temperature expected to be better in next batch. - Active quenching circuitry provides 1ms-0.1ms
pulse widths, no additional deadtime. - Successful fabrication of 4x1 tapered couplers
complexity trade-off unclear. - 50 mm diameter gAPDs breakdown occurs
predominantly at the surface. Due to suspected
design sensitivity to humidity. - New run, with better control of the surface
breakdown is being fabricated. Added backup
design to layout. Larger, 150 mm devices by
early February, 2003.
23Motivation for Geiger-mode APDs - Recap
- High gain (109), gt 1 volt pulses
- Minimizes required electronics
- Good detection efficiency in WLS range (gt20? At
550 nm) - Efficient for low light output from WLS fibers
- Low supply voltage requirements (10-40V)
- Simplifies wiring harness
- Minimal cooling requirements
- Simplifies mechanical plant
- CMOS process
- simple
- on-chip integration of readout -gt cost-savings
24Next Steps
- Many unanswered questions. Need to get the
devices in our own lab! - Assisting aPeak with SBIR proposal.
- CSU proposal to DoE Advanced Detector RD.
- Hope to provide a real HEP demonstration of
utility for broad range of fiber applications.