Abstract

Junction formation in deep trenches is proposed as a new means of creating a built-in drift field in silicon drift detectors (SDDs). The potential performance of this trenched drift detector (TDD) was investigated analytically and through simulations, and compared to simulations of conventional bulk-silicon drift detector (BSDD) configurations. Although the device was not experimentally realized, the manufacturability of the TDDs is estimated to be good on the basis of previously demonstrated photodiodes and detectors fabricated in PureB technology. The pure boron deposition of this technology allows good trench coverage and is known to provide nm-shallow low-noise p+n diodes that can be used as radiation-hard light-entrance windows. With this type of diode, the TDDs would be suitable for X-ray radiation detection down to 100 eV and up to tens of keV energy levels. In the TDD, the drift region is formed by varying the geometry and position of the trenches while the reverse biasing of all diodes is kept at the same constant voltage. For a given wafer doping, the drift field is lower for the TDD than for a BSDD and it demands a much higher voltage between the anode and cathode, but also has several advantages: it eliminates the possibility of punch-through and no current flows from the inner to outer perimeter of the cathode because a voltage divider is not needed to set the drift field. In addition, the loss of sensitive area at the outer perimeter of the cathode is much smaller. For example, the simulations predict that an optimized TDD geometry with an active-region radius of 3100 µm could have a drift field of 370 V/cm and a photo-sensitive radius that is 500-µm larger than that of a comparable BSDD structure. The PureB diodes on the front and back of the TDD are continuous, which means low dark currents and high stability with respect to leakage currents that otherwise could be caused by radiation damage. The dark current of the 3100-µm TDD will increase by only 34% if an interface trap concentration of 1012 cm−2 is introduced to approximate the oxide interface degradation that could be caused during irradiation. The TDD structure is particularly well-suited for implementation in multi-cell drift detector arrays where it is shown to significantly decrease the cross-talk between segments. The trenches will, however, also present a narrow dead area that can split the energy deposited by high-energy photons traversing this dead area. The count rate within a cell of a radius = 300 µm in a multi-cell TDD array is found to be as high as 10 Mcps.

Highlights

  • Silicon drift detectors (SDDs) as first proposed by Gatti and Rehak in 1983 [1,2] have ever since been used for detection of ionizing particles and X-ray/gamma-ray radiation [3,4,5,6,7,8]

  • A drift field of 80 V/cm is found for a detector radius of 3000 μm and a wafer doping of 5 × 1011 cm−3

  • ∆wsep = 80 μm, the total sensitive region has a 120 μm smaller radius than the neighboring curve, dn = 50 μm the potential difference ∆VTDD to move the electrons is only 25 V and the drift field is with n = 12 and ∆wsep = 30 μm

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Summary

Introduction

Silicon drift detectors (SDDs) as first proposed by Gatti and Rehak in 1983 [1,2] have ever since been used for detection of ionizing particles and X-ray/gamma-ray radiation [3,4,5,6,7,8]. The cathode on the opposite side of the wafer, forming emerging, such as those described, where the drift field, which sweeps light-generated electrons to the anode, is created by the light-entrance window, is biased at a constant voltage designed to assure depletion of the whole. Obtained by tapering semiconductor material between thethe cathodes, which has proposed the opposed to this,a an SDD operated withisthe same constant voltage on both cathodesmaterial was proposed in [20] In this design, built-in drift region by tapering the semiconductor between reducing the photo-sensitive volume forobtained high-energy light detection. Schematic the design and operation of a typical (bulk-silicon drift detector)

Schematic of theofdesign and operation of a typical
Trenched Drift Detector Concept
Electrostatic
Optimized
Potential
Transient Simulations
Transient response ofofthe variousTDD
Comparison
Multi-Cell Drift Detector Array of TDDs
14. Charge
Comments
Conclusions
Methods
Findings
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