Abstract

Future vertex detection at an upgraded KEK-B factory, currently the highest luminosity collider in the world, will require a detector technology capable of withstanding the increased track density and the larger radiation exposure. Near the beam pipe, the current silicon strip detectors have projected occupancies in excess of 100%. Advances in monolithic active-pixel sensors (MAPS) look very promising to address this problem. These devices are also quite attractive due to the possibility of making them very thin-essential for improved tracking and vertexing in the low-momenta environment of a B-factory. In the context of the Belle vertex detector upgrade, the major obstacles to realizing such a device have been concerns about radiation hardness and readout speed. Two prototypes implemented in the TSMC 0.35 /spl mu/m process have been developed to address these issues. Denoted the continuous-acquisition pixel (CAP), the two variants of this architecture are distinguished in that CAP2 includes an eight-deep sampling pipeline within each 22.5 /spl mu/m/sup 2/ pixel. Experience with this deep submicron process indicates tolerable threshold voltage shifts for ionizing radiation in excess of 20 Mrad. In order to maintain low occupancy and insensitivity to radiation-induced increased leakage current, correlated double sampling with a 10 /spl mu/s frame period is needed. Device description, hit resolution, and irradiation results are presented.

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