Abstract
With the increased brilliance of state-of-the-art synchrotron radiation sources and the advent of free-electron lasers (FELs) enabling revolutionary science with EUV to X-ray photons comes an urgent need for suitable photon imaging detectors. Requirements include high frame rates, very large dynamic range, single-photon sensitivity with low probability of false positives and (multi)-megapixels. At DESY, one ongoing development project - in collaboration with RAL/STFC, Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste, Diamond, and Pohang Accelerator Laboratory - is the CMOS-based soft X-ray imager PERCIVAL. PERCIVAL is a monolithic active-pixel sensor back-thinned to access its primary energy range of 250 eV to 1 keV with target efficiencies above 90%. According to preliminary specifications, the roughly 10 cm × 10 cm, 3.5k × 3.7k monolithic sensor will operate at frame rates up to 120 Hz (commensurate with most FELs) and use multiple gains within 27 µm pixels to measure 1 to ∼100000 (500 eV) simultaneously arriving photons. DESY is also leading the development of the AGIPD, a high-speed detector based on hybrid pixel technology intended for use at the European XFEL. This system is being developed in collaboration with PSI, University of Hamburg, and University of Bonn. The AGIPD allows single-pulse imaging at 4.5 MHz frame rate into a 352-frame buffer, with a dynamic range allowing single-photon detection and detection of more than 10000 photons at 12.4 keV in the same image. Modules of 65k pixels each are configured to make up (multi)megapixel cameras. This review describes the AGIPD and the PERCIVAL concepts and systems, including some recent results and a summary of their current status. It also gives a short overview over other FEL-relevant developments where the Photon Science Detector Group at DESY is involved.
Highlights
Photondiag2015 workshop collaboration led by DESY that includes PSI, University of Hamburg, and University of Bonn
This review describes the Adaptive gain integrating pixel detector (AGIPD) and the PERCIVAL concepts and systems, including some recent results and a summary of their current status
For AGIPD, this automatically adjusting gain is implemented by means of switches and additional capacitors put in parallel to the capacitor of the charge-sensitive preamplifier (CSA)
Summary
PERCIVAL is based on a monolithic active-pixel sensor (MAPS). This technology naturally enables small pixels with low capacitance and the inherent downside of the comparatively thin epilayers available in CMOS wafers is not as relevant at soft X-ray energies. Si, followed by a ‘13M’ version with 3520 Â 3710 pixels on a back illumination Performed by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory using their deltadoping process (Jacquot et al, 2012) Turning this intricate monolithic piece of silicon into a working detection system requires a complex periphery – in terms of power supplies and biases, finite state machine (FSM) control, handling the large data volume (50 Gbit sÀ1 for one 13M sensor), and mechanical and thermal interfaces. The collaborating partners DESY, Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste, Diamond, and Pohang Accelerator Laboratory share this effort, with DESY leading the in-vacuum electronics development of the immediate sensor vicinity including power and bias provision, mechanics and thermal design, and providing data handling FPGA boards with 4 Â 10 GbE stream-out capability that are shared between multiple DESY
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