Abstract

For the potential use in future high luminosity applications in high energy physics (HEP) (e.g. the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) upgrade), we evaluated the radiation hardness of a candidate technology for the front-end of the readout application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) for silicon strip detectors. The devices were a variety of silicon germanium (SiGe) heterojunction bipolar transistors (HBTs) manufactured by IBM in a modified 5HP process. The current gain as a function of collector current has been measured at several stages: before and after irradiation with 24 GeV protons up to fluences of 10 16 p/cm2, and after annealing at elevated temperature. The analog section of an amplifier for silicon strip detectors typically has a special front transistor, chosen carefully to minimize noise and usually requiring a larger current than the other transistors, and a large number of additional transistors used in shaping sections and for signal-level discrimination. We will discuss the behavior of both kinds of transistors, with a particular focus on issues of noise, power and radiation limitations

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