Published June 19, 2017 | Version v1
Thesis Open

Test-beam measurements and simulation studies of thin pixel sensors for the CLIC vertex detector

  • 1. ROR icon European Organization for Nuclear Research
  • 1. ETH Zurich main
  • 2. ROR icon European Organization for Nuclear Research

Description

The multi-$TeV$ $e^{+}e^{-}$ Compact Linear Collider (CLIC) is one of the options for a future high-energy collider for the post-LHC era. It would allow for searches of new physics and simultaneously offer the possibility for precision measurements of standard model processes. The physics goals and experimental conditions at CLIC set high precision requirements on the vertex detector made of pixel detectors: a high pointing resolution of 3 $\mu m$, very low mass of 0.2% $X_{0}$ per layer, 10 ns time stamping capability and low power dissipation of 50 mW/$cm^{2}$ compatible with air-flow cooling. In this thesis, hybrid assemblies with thin active-edge planar sensors are characterised through calibrations, laboratory and test-beam measurements. Prototypes containing 50 $\mu m$ to 150 $\mu m$ thin planar silicon sensors bump-bonded to Timepix3 readout ASICs with 55 $\mu m$ pitch are characterised in test beams at the CERN SPS in view of their detection efficiency and single-point resolution. A digitiser for AllPix, a Geant4-based simulation framework, has been developed in order to gain a deeper understanding of the charge deposition spectrum and the charge sharing in such thin sensors. The AllPix framework is also used to simulate the beam telescope and extract its tracking resolution. It is also employed to predict the resolution that can be achieved with future assemblies with thin sensors and smaller pitch. For CLIC, a full coverage of the vertex detector is essential while keeping the material content as low as possible. Seamless tiling of sensors, without the need for overlaps, by the active-edge technology allows for extending the detection capability to the physical edge of the sensor and thereby minimising the inactive regions. Thin-sensor prototypes containing active edges with different configurations are characterised in test-beams in view of the detection performance at the sensor edge. Technology Computer-Aided Design (TCAD) finite-element simulations are implemented to reproduce the fabrication and the operation of such devices. The simulation results are compared to data for different edge terminations.

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CERN-THESIS-2016-311.pdf

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Additional details

Identifiers

CDS
2270788
Inspire
1635341
CDS Reference
CERN-THESIS-2016-311
CDS Reference
DISS.ETHNO.24216

CERN

Department
EP
Programme
CERN Doctoral Student Program
Studies
CLICdp