Abstract
Silicon pad sensors are proposed as active material in highly granular sampling calorimeters of future collider experiments such as the Compact Linear Collider (CLIC) or the International Linear Collider (ILC). The electromagnetic section of these designs often include O(1000 m$^2$) of silicon pad sensors. For the luminosity measurement, a dedicated forward calorimeter called LumiCal is foreseen. More recently, the CMS experiment has decided to adopt the same concept in its endcap calorimeter upgrade for the HL-LHC. The sensors are typically produced from 6- or 8-inch wafers and consist of a few hundred smaller cells, each with an area of O(0.1 to 1 $\text{cm}^2$). For the prototyping phase of these projects, several design choices have to be evaluated while for mass production, thousands of sensors have to be tested for quality control. For the electrical characterisation of these sensors, it is important to bias them under realistic conditions. To fulfil these requirements, ARRAY, a compact, modular and cost efficient system for large area silicon pad sensor characterisation has been developed and successfully commissioned. It consists of two plugin printed circuit boards: an active switching matrix with 512 input channels that holds all controls and a passive probe card that connects to the sensor. The latter can then be adapted to any sensor geometry. All design files are open source. The system has been used to measure currents ranging from 500 pA to 5 $\mu$A and capacitances between 5 pF and 100 pF. A precision of better than 0.2 pF on capacitance measurements in that range can be achieved. Examples of calibration and measurement results for leakage current and capacitance are presented.
Highlights
Imaging calorimetry systems optimised for Particle Flow Analysis [1] are proposed for future collider experiments such as the Compact Linear Collider (CLIC) [2] or the International Linear Collider (ILC) [3]
For the luminosity measurement at such colliders, a dedicated forward calorimeter called LumiCal [4] with similar structure has been proposed to measure Bhabha scattering at small angles
LumiCal is developed within the Forward Calorimetry collaboration (FCAL)
Summary
Imaging calorimetry systems optimised for Particle Flow Analysis [1] are proposed for future collider experiments such as the Compact Linear Collider (CLIC) [2] or the International Linear Collider (ILC) [3]. The Compact Muon Solenoid experiment (CMS) has decided to use the same concept of a highly granular sampling calorimeter in the upgrade of its endcap calorimeters [5] for the High Luminosity phase at the Large Hadron Collider (HL-LHC) This upgrade, commonly called HGCAL (High Granularity Calorimeter), will use about 27000 silicon pad sensors to cover roughly 600 m2. Parameters like the breakdown voltage Vbd or the capacitance at full depletion Cfd can be extracted As these parameters depend on the exact electric field configuration inside the sensor, it is essential that all pads are biased during sensor characterisation, similar to the operating of the experiment. Due to limitations of commercial systems, a dedicated switching matrix together with a probe card has been developed to fulfil all requirements of performance, compactness and cost.
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More From: Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A: Accelerators, Spectrometers, Detectors and Associated Equipment
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