Title: Avalanche Photodiodes from the Start.
1Avalanche Photodiodes from the Start.
- R. Rusack
- The University of Minnesota
2Early History
- Avalanche Photodiodes were invented by R.
McIntyre at RCA in Canada in the late sixties. - First considered in HEP at an Isabel meeting.
- Considered at the SDC for the readout of the EM
shower max detector. - RCA (? GE ? EGG)
- API
- RMD
3How they work
Electrons generated by the incident light are
multiplied in the high field region at the
junction.
4Why CMS selected APDs
5Nuclear Counter Effect
6APDs with crystals
High side tail suppressed by APD.
7APDs in the CMS detector
PbWO4 crystal
8Light Output from PbWO4
Light out from Bogorodisk PbWO4 crystal.
Output is peaked at 420 nm. 50 photons/MeV from
the
9APDs for CMS
- Manufacturer
- Hamamatsu Photonics, Japan.
- Quantity
- Two APDs per crystal 124,000 APDs with spares.
- Accessibility during operation
- None.
- Radiation levels
- Maximum expected dose 200 kGy and 2 1013
neutrons/cm2. - Crystal Light Outout
- 50 photons/MeV on a 4.5 cm2 area.
10Basic APD Structure
Junction
Si2N4 AR coating
5 5 mm2 active area
Groove to minimize surface leakage current.
APD is grown epitaxially on an n wafer.
11APD properties
12APD parameters I
13APD parameters II
Excess Noise Factor v Gain
Capacitance v Bias
Quantum Efficiency
Response uniformity at 420 nm.
14Problems Solved
- Radiation Damage
- Neutron
- Ionizing radiation.
- API effect.
- Quantum efficiency drift.
- Change to epoxy
- Lifetime
- Failure due to poor surface connectivity.
- Electrical Characteristics.
- High Capacitance.
15Irradiation Tests.
- Irradiation with protons
- All irradiation so far has been with an 70 MeV
protons beam at PSI Switzerland. - 2 1013 neutrons/cm2 in 1 hour.
- Irradiation with gammas.
- All irradiation with 60C0 source.
- Irradiation with neutrons.
- Setting up a Californium source (252Cf) for
irradiation at the University of Minnesota. - 2 1013 neutrons/cm2 in 2 days.
16Device failure
Irradiation in a 70 MeV proton beam.
17Diagnosis
Breakdown at this point when irradiated. High
current at the SiO2-Al interface. Solution
increase spacing of Al deposit.
18Lessons
- To bring a new technology to reality requires
- Time 1987 to 1996.
- Early resources. TNLRC/SSC to show viability.
- To go from a possibility to an established
technology takes - Time 1996 to 2001.
- Resources 500k.
- A manufacturer who sees this technology as a
future money earner and does not expect to
recover all costs of development from the
experiment. - Expect the unexpected.