Title: Rainer Wallny
1Silicon Detectors How They Work
- Rainer Wallny
- Silicon Detector Workshop at UCSB
- May 11th, 2006
- Slides ruthlessly stolen from
- Paula Collins, CERN
- Alan Honma, CERN
- Christian Joram, CERN
- Michael Moll, CERN
- Steve Worm, RAL
2Outline
- Why Silicon ?
- Semiconductor Basics
- Band-gap, PN junction
- Silicon strip detectors
- Some Technicalities
- - Wafer Production
- - Wire Bonding
- Radiation Damage
- Effect on Vd
- Effect on Leakage Currents
- Conclusions
3Tracking Chambers with Solid Media
- Ionization chamber medium could be gas, liquid,
or solid - Some technologies (ie. bubble chambers) not
applicable in collider environments
Solid-state detectors require high-technology
devices built by specialists and appear as black
boxes with unchangeable characteristics.
-Tom Ferbel, 1987
3
4Why Silicon?
- Electrical properties are good
- Forms a native oxide with excellent electrical
properties - Ionization energy is small enough for easy
ionization, yet large enough to maintain a low
dark current - Mechanical properties are good
- Easily patterned and read out at small dimensions
- Can be operated in air and at room temperature
- Can assemble into complex geometries
- Availability and experience
- Significant industrial experience and commercial
applications - Readily available at your nearest beach
4
5The Idea is Not Quite New
6Pioneering Silicon Strip Detectors
6
7Contemporary Silicon Modules
CDF SVX IIa half-ladder two silicon sensors
with readout electronics (SVX3b analog readout
chip) mounted on first sensor
ATLAS SCT barrel module four silicon sensors
with center-tapped readout electronics (ABCD
binary readout chip)
7
8Large Contemporary Silicon Systems
DELPHI (1996) 1.8m2 silicon area 175 000
readout channels
CMS Silicon Tracker (2007) 12,000 modules
223 m2 silicon area 25,000 silicon wafers
10M readout channels
CDF SVX IIa (2001-) 11m2 silicon area 750 000
readout channels
8
9New Production Paradigm
evolution DELPHI (888 detectors, 8
geometries) CDF (8000
sensors, 8 geometries) CMS
(25000 sensors, 15 geometries)
Each sensor treated individually, nurtured into
life in many hours of careful handling
P. Collins, Warwick 2006
10Moores Law for Silicon Detector Systems
11Large Silicon Detector Systems .
12The Basics
13Semiconductor Basics Band Gap
14Semiconductor Basics Principle of Operation
- Basic motivation charged particle position
measurement - Use ionization signal (dE/dx) left behind by
charged particle passage
15Doping Silicon
- n-type
- In an n-type semiconductor, negative charge
carriers (electrons) are obtained by adding
impurities of donor ions (eg. Phosphorus (type
V)) - Donors introduce energy levels close to
conduction band thus almost fully ionized gt
Fermi Level near CB - Electrons are the majority carriers.
- p-type
- In a p-type semiconductor, positive charge
carriers (holes) are obtained by adding
impurities of acceptor ions (eg. Boron (type
III)) - Acceptors introduce energy levels close to
valence band thus absorb electrons fromVB,
creating holes gt Fermi Level near VB. - Holes are the majority carriers.
16The pn-Junction
- Exploit the properties of a p-n junction (diode)
to collect ionization charges
When brought together to form a junction, a
gradient of electron and hole densities results
in a diffuse migration of majority carriers
across the junction. Migration leaves a region of
net charge of opposite sign on each side, called
the depletion region (depleted of charge
carriers). Electric field set up prevents
further migration of carriers resulting in
potential difference Vbi Another way to look at
it Fermi-Levels need to be adjusted so thus
energy bands get distorted gt potential Vbi
17pn - Junction
18How to Build a Silicon Detector
19Properties of the Depletion Zone
- Depletion width is a function of the bulk
resistivity , charge carrier mobility and the
magnitude of reverse bias voltage Vb
Vd d2 /(2???)
20Properties of the Depletion Zone (contd)
- One normally measures the depletion behavior
(finds the depletion voltage) by measuring the
capacitance versus reverse bias voltage. The
capacitance is simply the parallel plate capacity
of the depletion zone.
capacitance vs voltage
1/C2 vs voltage
21Leakage Current
- - Two main sources of (unwanted) current flow in
reversed-biased diode - Diffusion current, charge generated in undepleted
zone adjacent to depletion zone diffuses into
depletion zone (otherwise would quickly
recombine)
negligible in a fully depleted device
Exponential dependence on temperature due to
thermal dependence of e-h pair creation by
defects in bulk. Rate is determined by nature and
concentration of defects.
21
22Bias Resistor and AC Coupling
- Need to isolate strips from each other and
collect/measure charge on each strip gt high
impedance bias connection (resistor or
equivalent) - Usually want to AC (capacitatively) couple input
amplifier to avoid large DC input from leakage
current. - Both of these structures are often integrated
directly on the silicon sensor. Bias resistors
via deposition of doped polycrystalline silicon,
and capacitors via metal readout lines over the
implants but separated by an insulating
dielectric layer (SiO2 , Si3N4).
23The Charge Signal
dE/dx)Si 3.88 MeV/cm, for 300 mm thick 116
keV This is mean loss, for silicon detectors use
most probable loss (0.7 mean) 81 keV 3.6eV
needed to make e-h pair Collected charge 22500 e
(3.6 fC)
24But There Is Noizzzzzz ..
- Landau distribution has significant low energy
tail which becomes even lower with noise
broadening. - Noise sources
- Capacitance ENC Cd
- Leakage Current ENC v I
- Thermal Noise ENC v( kT/R)
One usually has low occupancy in silicon sensors
?most channels have no signal. Dont want noise
to produce fake hits so need to cut high above
noise tail to define good hits. But if too high
you lose efficiency for real signals. Figure of
Merit Signal-to-Noise Ratio S/N. Typical
Values 10-15, people get nervous below 10.
Radiation Damage can degrade the S/N. Thus S/N
determines detector lifetime in radiation
environment.
25Charge Collection and Diffusion
- Drift velocity of charge carriers v ?E, so
drift time, td d/v d/?E - Typical values d300 ?m, E 2.5kV/cm, ?e
1350?h 450 cm2 / Vs, gives td(e) 9ns ,
td(h) 27ns
26Double Sided Detectors
Why not get a 2nd coordinate by measuring
position of the (electron) charge collected on
the opposite face?
- SOLUTION
- Put p-strips in between the n-strips.
- OR
- Put field plates (metal over oxide) over the
n-strips and apply a
potential to repel the electrons.
27Guard Rings and Avalanche Breakdown
We have treated the silicon strip device as
having infinite area, but it has edges. What
happens at the edges?
27
28Some Technicalities
29Material Float Zone Silicon (FZ)
? Using a single Si crystal seed, meltthe
vertically oriented rod onto the seed using RF
power and pull the single crystal ingot
- Wafer production? Slicing, lapping, etching,
polishing
- Oxygen enrichment (DOFZ)? Oxidation of wafer at
high temperatures
30Czochralski silicon (Cz) Epitaxial silicon (EPI)
- Pull Si-crystal from a Si-melt contained in a
silica crucible while rotating. - Silica crucible is dissolving oxygen into the
melt ? high concentration of O in CZ - Material used by IC industry (cheap)
- Recent developments (2 years) made CZ available
in sufficiently high purity (resistivity) to
allow for use as particle detector.
Czochralski Growth
- Chemical-Vapor Deposition (CVD) of Silicon
- CZ silicon substrate used ? in-diffusion of
oxygen - growth rate about 1mm/min
- excellent homogeneity of resistivity
- up to 150 mm thick layers produced
- price depending on thickness of epi-layer but
not extending 3 x price of FZ
wafer
31Wafer Processing (1)
SiO2
Photolithography ( mask align photo-resist
layer developing) followed by etching to make
windows in oxide
UV light
etch
mask
32Wafer Processing (2)
B
As
Al
Photolithography followed by Al
metallization over implanted strips and over
backplane usually by evaporation.
33Bringing It All Together
- Connectivity technology some of the
possibilities - High density interconnects (HDI)industry
standard and custom cables, usually flexible
kapton/copper with miniature connectors. - Soldering still standard for surface mount
components, packaged chips and some cables.
Conductive adhesives are often a viable low
temperature alternative, especially for delicate
substrates. - Wire bonding the standard method for connecting
sensors to each other and to the front-end chips.
Usually employed for all connections of the
front-end chips and bare die ASICs. A mature
technology (has been around for about 40 years).
4 x 640 wire bonds
200 wire bonds
Total 2700 wire bonds
34Wire Bonding
- Uses ultrasonic power to vibrate needle-like tool
on top of wire. Friction welds wire to metallized
substrate underneath. - Can easily handle 80?m pitch in a single row and
40?m in two staggered rows (typical FE chip input
pitch is 44?m). - Generally use 25?m diameter aluminium wire and
bond to aluminium pads (chips) or gold pads
(hybrid substrates). - Heavily used in industry (PC processors) but not
with such thin wire or small pitch.
35Radiation Damage
36Radiation Damage in Silicon Sensors
- Two general types of radiation damage to the
detector materials - ? Bulk (Crystal) damage due to Non Ionizing
Energy Loss (NIEL) - displacement
damage, built up of crystal defects - Change of effective doping concentration (higher
depletion voltage,
under- depletion) - Increase of leakage current (increase of shot
noise, thermal runaway) - Increase of charge carrier trapping (loss of
charge) - ? Surface damage due to Ionizing Energy Loss
(IEL) - accumulation of positive in the
oxide (SiO2) and the Si/SiO2 interface
affects interstrip capacitance (noise
factor), breakdown behavior, - Impact on detector performance and Charge
Collection Efficiency (depending on detector
type and geometry and readout electronics!) - Sensors can fail from radiation damage by virtue
of - Noise too high to effectively operate
- Depletion voltage too high to deplete
- Loss of inter-strip isolation (charge spreading)
- ? Signal/Noise Ratio is the
quantity to watch !
37Run I Experience SVX Signal-to-Noise
- Radiation Damage limits the ultimate lifetime of
the Detector - Need S/N gt8 to perform online b-tagging with SVT
- Need S/N gt5 for offline b-tagging
38Surface Damage
Metal (Al)
-
-
-
- Surface damage generation over time
- Ionizing radiation creates electron/hole pairs in
the SiO2 - Many recombine, electrons migrate quickly away
- Holes slowly migrate to Si/SiO2 interface.
- Hole mobility is much lower than for electrons
- (20 cm2/Vs vs. 2x105 cm2/Vs)
- Some holes stick in the boundary layer
- Surface damage results in
- Increased interface trapped charge (see picture)
- Increase in fixed oxide charges
- Surface generation centers
-
-
Oxide (SiO2)
-
-
-
-
Interface (SiOx)
Semiconductor (Si)
After electron transport
-
After transport of the holes
- Electron accumulation under the oxide interface
can alter the depletion voltage (depends on
oxide quality and sensor geometry) - In silicon strip sensors, surface damage effects
(oxide charge) saturate at a few hundred kRad
39Bulk Damage
Vacancy/Oxygen Center
- Bulk damage is mainly from hadrons displacing
primary lattice atoms (for E gt 25 eV) - Results in silicon interstitial, vacancy, and
typically a large disordered region - 1 MeV neutron transfers 60-70 keV to recoiling
silicon atom, which in turn displaces 1000
additional atoms - Defects can recombine or migrate through the
lattice to form more complex and stable defects - Annealing can be beneficial, but
- Defects can be stable or unstable
- Displacement damage is directly related to the
non-ionizing energy loss (NIEL) of the
interaction - Varies by incident particle type and energy
- Normalize fluence to 1 MeV n-equivalent
O
Vacancy
Disordered region
Interstitial
C
Carbon Interstitial
Carbon-Carbon Pair
C
C
Di-vacancy
Phosphorous dopant
Carbon-Oxygen pair
P
O
C
40Microscopic defects
- Damage to the silicon crystal Displacement of
lattice atoms
EKgt25 eV
Vacancy Interstitial
point defects, mobile in silicon,can react
with impurities (O,C,..)
EK gt 5 keV
point defects and clusters of defects
Distribution of vacancies created by a 50 keV
Si-ion in silicon (typical recoil energy for 1
MeV neutrons) SchematicVan Lint 1980
SimulationM.Huhtinen 2001
80 nm
- Defects can be electrically active (levels in the
band gap) - capture and release electrons and
holes from conduction and valence band - ? can be charged - can be generation/recombination
centers - can be trapping centers
41Impact of Defects on Detector properties
Inter-center charge transfer model (inside
clusters only)
Shockley-Read-Hall statistics (standard
theory)
Trapping (e and h)? CCEshallow defects do not
contribute at room temperature due to fast
detrapping
charged defects ? Neff , Vdepe.g. donors in
upper and acceptors in lower half of band gap
generation ? leakage currentLevels close to
midgap most effective
enhanced generation ? leakage current ?
space charge
Impact on detector properties can be calculated
if all defect parameters are known?n,p cross
sections ?E ionization energy
Nt concentration
42Radiation Damage Effect on Neff
- Change of Depletion Voltage Vdep (Neff)
. with particle fluence
Type inversion Neff changes from positive to
negative (Space Charge Sign Inversion)
before inversion
n
n
p
p
after inversion
43Depletion Voltage Death of SVX Layer 0
Steve Worm, Vertex 2003
Central Prediction
1s Prediction
300
1s Prediction
Data Extrapolation
Depletion Voltage (V)
200
100
0
0
4
6
2
8
Integrated Luminosity (fb1)
SVXII L0 lifetime prediction based on Hamburg
Model (M.Moll) - Will SVXII L0 survive Run II ?
-gt Antonios Talk
44Radiation Damage Leakage Current
- Change of Leakage Current (after hadron
irradiation) . with particle
fluence
80 min 60?C
- Damage parameter ? (slope in figure)
Leakage current
per unit volume
and particle fluence - ? is constant over several orders of fluenceand
independent of impurity concentration in Si ?
can be used for fluence measurement
45Recent Bias Current (Re-) Analysis
L0
P.Dong et. al, upcoming CDF note
46Radiation Damage Trapping
- Deterioration of Charge Collection Efficiency
(CCE) by trapping
Trapping is characterized by an effective
trapping time ?eff for electrons and holes
where
Increase of inverse trapping time (1/?) with
fluence
47Decrease of Charge Collection Efficiency
- Two basic mechanisms reduce collectable charge
- trapping of electrons and holes ? (depending on
drift and shaping time !) - under-depletion ?
(depending on detector design and geometry !) - Example ATLAS microstrip detectors fast
electronics (25ns)
- n-in-n versus p-in-n - same material, same
fluence- over-depletion needed
- p-in-n oxygenated versus standard FZ- beta
source- 20 charge loss after 5x1014 p/cm2 (23
GeV)
48Oxygenation Benefits
- oxygenation increases radiation hardness
- sometimes, standard FZ exhibits similar
radiation hardness - reasons unclear - Concentrate RD on CZ and EPI silicon
Michael Moll, IWORID Glasgow 2004
49Summary
- Have fun in California - You deserve it!
50 51Sensor Materials Diamond, SiC and GaN
- Wide bandgap (3.3eV)
- lower leakage current than silicon
- SignalDiamond 36 e/mmSiC
51 e/mmSi 89 e/mm - more charge than diamond
- Higher displacement threshold than silicon
- radiation harder than silicon (?)
RD on diamond detectorsRD42
Collaborationhttp//cern.ch/rd42/
Recent review P.J.Sellin and J.Vaitkus on behalf
of RD50 New materials for radiation hard
semiconductor detectors, submitted to NIMA
52Microscopic defects
- Damage to the silicon crystal Displacement of
lattice atoms
EKgt25 eV
Vacancy Interstitial
point defects, mobile in silicon,can react
with impurities (O,C,..)
EK gt 5 keV
point defects and clusters of defects
Distribution of vacancies created by a 50 keV
Si-ion in silicon (typical recoil energy for 1
MeV neutrons) SchematicVan Lint 1980
SimulationM.Huhtinen 2001
80 nm
- Defects can be electrically active (levels in the
band gap) - capture and release electrons and
holes from conduction and valence band - ? can be charged - can be generation/recombination
centers - can be trapping centers
53Radiation Damage in Silicon
Close proximity to the interaction region means
the sensors are subject to high doses of radiation
- Two general types of radiation damage
- Bulk damage due to physical impact within the
crystal - Surface damage in the oxide or Si/SiO2
interface - Cumulative effects
- Increased leakage current (increased Shot noise)
- Silicon bulk type inversion (n-type to p-type)
- Increased depletion voltage
- Increased capacitance
- Sensors can fail from radiation damage by virtue
of - Noise too high to effectively operate
- Depletion voltage too high to deplete
- Loss of inter-strip isolation (charge spreading)
- Ratio of signal/noise is the important quantity
to watch
54Bulk Damage Depletion Voltage
- Depletion voltage is often parameterized
- in three parts (Hamburg model)
- DNeff(T,t,F) NA NC NY
- Short term annealing (NA)
- NA Feq iga,iexp(-ka,i(T)t)
- Reduces NY (beneficial)
- Time constant is a few days at 20 C
- Stable component (Nc)
- Nc Nc0(1-exp(-cFeq))gcFeq
- Does not anneal (does not depend on time or
temperature) - Partial donor removal (exponential or limited
exponential) - Creation of acceptor sites (linear)
- Long term reverse annealing (NY)
- NY NY,81-1/(1 NY,8kY(T)t), NY,8 gYFeq
- Strong temperature dependence
- 1 year at T20 C is the same as lt1 day at T60 C
or 100 years at T -7 C (ATLAS) - Can be significant long term must cool Si
S
Figure 9 Dependence of Neff on the accumulated 1
MeV neutron equivalent fluence for standard and
oxygen enriched FZ silicon irradiated with
reactor neutrons (Ljubljana), 23 GeV protons
(CERN PS) and 192 MeV pions (PSI).
Fig.13 Annealing behaviour of the radiation
induced change in the effective doping
concentration ?Neff at 60?C.
55Bulk Damage Leakage Current
- Defects created by bulk damage provide
intermediate states within the band gap - intermediate states act as stepping stones of
thermal generation of electron/hole pairs - Some of these states anneal away the bulk
current reduces with time (and temperature) after
irradiation - Annealing function a(t)
- Parameterized by the sum of several exponentials
aiexp(-t/ti) - Full annealing (for the example below) reached
after 1 year at 20ºC - At low temperatures, annealing effectively stops
56Bulk Damage Effects (Simple View)
- Leakage Current
- DI a(t)FV
- Current depends on a(t) (annealing function), V
(volume), and F (fluence). - Annealing reduces the current
- Independent of particle type
- Depletion Voltage
- Vdep qNeffd2/2ee0
- Depends on effective dopant concentration (Neff
Ndonors Nacceptors), sensor thickness (d),
permitivity (ee0). - Depletion voltage is often parameterized in three
parts - Short term annealing (Na)
- A stable component (Nc)
- Long term reverse annealing (NY)
57 Bulk Damage Leakage Results
- Measured values of a(t)
- Typically one quotes measured values of a(t)
after complete annealing at T20ºC a8 a(t8) - Some typical world averages for a8 are
- 2.2 x 10-17 A/cm3 for protons, pions
- 2.9 x 10-17 A/cm3 for neutrons
- Recent results show a(t80min,T60ºC) 4.0 x
10-17 A/cm3 for all types of silicon, levels of
impurities, and incident particle types (NIM A426
(1999)86).
58Silicon Detectors How They Work
- Rainer Wallny
- Silicon Detector Workshop at UCSB
- May 11th, 2006
- Slides ruthlessly stolen from
- Paula Collins, CERN
- Alan Honma, CERN
- Christian Joram, CERN
- Michael Moll, CERN
- Steve Worm, RAL