Title: Problems with CCE simulations
1Problems with CCE simulations
- David Pennicard
- University of Glasgow
2Perugia radiation damage model (p-type)
Ec
Ev
3The two acceptor levels reproduce leakage current
and Neff well
Act as electron traps when collecting charge
Ec
-
- -
Close to midgap Significant effect on space
charge and leakage
Acceptor levels Majority contain holes and have
no net charge Small proportion contain electrons
give -ve space charge Will trap excess electrons
Ev
4The donor level has little effect on leakage and
space charge. It was added in to give correct CCE
performance
Ec
Far from midgap, so little effect on leakage and
space charge
Donor level Vast majority contain electrons and
have no net charge Very small proportion contain
hole give ve space charge Will trap excess holes
0
Ev
Act as hole traps
5Tests of CCE in Perugia model
- With MIP signals, matches 300µm strip detector
test results well - This is shown in their paper, and I reproduced
these results too - Readout signals look reasonable
6Tests of CCE in Perugia model
- With MIP signals, matches 300µm strip detector
test results well - This is shown in their paper, and I reproduced
these results too - Readout signals look reasonable
- BUT the trap parameters might just be fitted to
the data from a specific device without
necessarily giving the correct internal behaviour
7Trapping time
- Experimentally, trapping leads to an exponential
decay in free carrier concentrations (and hence
the current signal) - The trapping time is related to the concentration
and cross-section of the relevant trap(s). For
levels above the midgap - Similarly, levels below the midgap will lead to a
hole trapping time
8Trapping time
- Experimentally, trap concentration increases with
fluence, so the trapping times are characterised
by - Experimentally, ße ßh 4.010-7cm2s-1
- But, with the Perugia trap cross-sections and
concentrations, I calculate - ße 1.610-7cm2s-1
- ßh 3.510-8cm2s-1
- So, this would imply a factor of 4 difference in
trapping times in the model. In principle, could
correct this by increasing donor cross-sections
or concentration. - Experimentally, ß doesnt tend to be measured
beyond 1015neq/cm2, and CCE from highly
irradiated detectors is better than expected, so
lower ß could be OK
9Tests of electron hole trapping
- N-p diode
- Charge deposited at front to test hole
collection, and back to test electron collection
N
5µm
h
e
Charge at front, most of collection signal comes
from hole drift
300µm
p-type
P
10Tests of electron hole trapping
- These tests were done with
- No damage
- Perugia trap model, with 1015neq/cm2
- Modified Perugia trap model, with hole trap
concentration increased by 4 to give (in
principle) equal electron and hole trapping times - The modified Perugia trap model gives the same IV
characteristics and electric field distribution
as the regular one
11Charge deposited at front surface no traps
Brief pulse as electrons collected
Fairly uniform current until holes collected
Signal at p ohmic contact matches n (except for
sign)
12Charge deposited at front surface with traps
Current larger at start! Scales with hole trap
conc (not simply due to altered field)
Signal decays with time (expected) but note that
charge signal is increased overall!
P signals are smaller than those at n
differences in electrode currents are not
expected in 2-terminal devices
13Charge deposited at back surface
Brief pulse as electrons collected
Electrons drift from back surface to n Faster
collection than for holes
Fairly uniform current until holes collected
Signal at p ohmic contact matches n (except for
sign)
14Charge deposited at back surface
Current is larger at p than n, but results here
are less unusual
15How do the hole trap parameters affect this?
- The change in the front simulation signal
scales with the predicted inverse trapping time
vthNsp - i.e. doubling the trap hole cross-section has the
same effect as doubling the trap concentration - altering the electron cross-section has no effect
- Changing the energy level of the hole trap has no
effect (tested by 0.05eV) - Putting it close to the midgap would alter Neff
- The effect on the hole collection signal is not
significantly changed if the acceptor levels are
removed (the change in the electric field has
some effect) - If the charge is deposited 25µm from the surface,
the effect is reduced somewhat but not eliminated.
16Behaviour within the devices
- I plotted the state of the devices a different
points during the transient simulations, then
viewed them with Tecplot. - The following results use a p-type substrate and
the Perugia trap models with increased donor
concentration.
17Hole collection hole current
With traps, hole current decays
Motion of holes
18Hole collection hole recombination
Recombination matches hole transport
19Hole collection trapped holes
Increase in trapped hole conc. after holes pass
20Hole collection displacement current
Unequal displacement current matching unusual
readout signals
21Electron collection electron current
Electron drift is also reasonable
Indications of correct trapping
22Electron collection displacement current
Once again, displacement current corresponds to
odd readout current
23Tecplot results
- The carrier transport, and the parameters
directly associated with trapping (recombination,
trap occupation) all seem reasonable. - The displacement current, which reflects the
changing electric field in the device,
corresponds to the odd readout signals - Possibly suggests that carrier transport and
trapping is working OK, but the transient
electrostatic behaviour is wrong?
24Tests with alternative trap model
- These tests were re-done using a 2-trap model
- The model has one acceptor trap above midgap
(which will trap electrons) and one donor trap
level below the midgap (traps holes) - These are at Ec-0.3eV and Ev0.3eV respectively,
and have equal concentrations and cross-sections - Since these are far from the midgap, there is
little effect on Neff, and so I can do tests with
both n- and p-type substrates
Ec
Acceptor at Ec-0.3eV
Donor at Ev0.3eV
Ev
25Tests with alternative trap model
- Results
- The form of the graphs are the same (excessively
high currents at the start of the simulation
followed by a decaying signal) - Larger currents tend to be produced when the
charge is deposited nearer the rectifying contact
(i.e. the n front contact if the substrate is
p-type, the p back if the substrate is n-type). - Given a particular substrate type and position of
charge deposition, the current signal is larger
at the contact near where the charge is deposited - Given the above, the relative sizes of the
signals are much the same for electron and hole
transport - A plus side the decay rates of the current
signals are reasonable - Example
26Alternative trap model hole collection signal
Excessively high signal. This trap model doesnt
affect the electric field pattern, so this is
specifically a trapping effect.
But, by dividing the signal with traps by the
undamaged signal
27Alternative trap model hole collection signal
The decay of the signal fits an exponential exp
(-t/t) t1ns, which is close to the predicted
value of 1.3ns from
Exponential curve
Simulation result
28Alternative trap model electron signal
This is the electron collection signal from the
p contact in an n-type substrate device. The
lifetime is te0.75ns This matches the hole
lifetime, when you consider that vthh0.75vthe
Exponential curve
Simulation result
29Further work
- In theory, readout signals can be deduced by
finding the carrier transport then calculating
the signal induced on the electrodes. - Signal formation Experimentally, Ramos theorem
is still valid even with radiation damage. But do
these trap models alter the signal formation? - Alternative modelling methods? Potentially,
simulations can be done - Suggestions?