Intrinsic time resolution of 3D-trench silicon pixels for charged particle detection
physics.ins-det
/ Authors
Lucio Anderlini, Mauro Aresti, Andrea Bizzeti, Maurizio Boscardin, Alessandro Cardini, Gian-Franco Dalla Betta, Marco Ferrero, Giulio Forcolin, Michela Garau, Adriano Lai
and 10 more authors
Andrea Lampis, Angelo Loi, Chiara Lucarelli, Roberto Mendicino, Roberto Mulargia, Margherita Obertino, Enrico Robutti, Sabina Ronchin, Marta Ruspa, Stefania Vecchi
/ Abstract
In the last years, high-resolution time tagging has emerged as the tool to tackle the problem of high-track density in the detectors of the next generation of experiments at particle colliders. Time resolutions below 50ps and event average repetition rates of tens of MHz on sensor pixels having a pitch of 50$μ$m are typical minimum requirements. This poses an important scientific and technological challenge on the development of particle sensors and processing electronics. The TIMESPOT initiative (which stands for TIME and SPace real-time Operating Tracker) aims at the development of a full prototype detection system suitable for the particle trackers of the next-to-come particle physics experiments. This paper describes the results obtained on the first batch of TIMESPOT silicon sensors, based on a novel 3D MEMS (micro electro-mechanical systems) design. Following this approach, the performance of other ongoing silicon sensor developments has been matched and overcome, while using a technology which is known to be robust against radiation degradation. A time resolution of the order of 20ps has been measured at room temperature suggesting also possible improvements after further optimisations of the front-end electronics processing stage.