2018 IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium and Medical Imaging Conference Proceedings (NSS/MIC) 2018
DOI: 10.1109/nssmic.2018.8824342
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Development of Large-area Lithium-drifted Silicon Detectors for the GAPS Experiment

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Cited by 8 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…This paper discusses the performance of the first GAPS flight-geometry detectors. An overview of the production process, including the baseline detector performance and yield, are described in [20]. Here, we demonstrate that both the flight-geometry 8-strip design and the alternate 4-strip design are capable of delivering the X-ray energy resolution and particle tracking performance required for a GAPS flight, given proper choice of pulse shaping and readout electronics.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 86%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…This paper discusses the performance of the first GAPS flight-geometry detectors. An overview of the production process, including the baseline detector performance and yield, are described in [20]. Here, we demonstrate that both the flight-geometry 8-strip design and the alternate 4-strip design are capable of delivering the X-ray energy resolution and particle tracking performance required for a GAPS flight, given proper choice of pulse shaping and readout electronics.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 86%
“…Details of the Shimadzu fabrication technique and process yield are reported separately [20,21]. The Shimadzu detectors differ from the SEMIKON detectors in their ability to use silicon substrate from SUMCO Corporation (rather than more costly substrate from Topsil Semiconductor Materials), their larger grooves machined using the easier and simpler technique of ultrasonic impact grinding (rather than more costly plasma-etched grooves), their top-hat geometry (rather than inverted-T, as defined in [22]) which allows for simpler preparation of exposed surfaces, their readout from the n + -side (rather than p-side), and in the thin undrifted layer on the p-side, which has proven critical to suppressing leakage currents in these large-area and high temperature detectors.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Each Si(Li) wafer has 4inch diameter and 2.5 mm thickness and is segmented into 8 strips. [25][26][27][28] The Si(Li) detector serves as a degrader, a depth sensing detector, a stopping target to form an exotic atom, an X-ray spectrometer and a charged particle tracker. In order to distinguish antideuteronic X-rays from antiprotonic X-rays, the energy resolution for X-rays should be better than ∼4 keV, which is achievable at operating temperatures of ∼-40 • C.…”
Section: Instrument Designmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The strips of each detector plane are all oriented in the same direction and are arranged orthogonally for alternate planes. The silicon detector array is ten layers deep and each tracking plane is composed of 12×12 Si(Li) wafers [5].…”
Section: The Si(li) Trackermentioning
confidence: 99%