Design study and spectroscopic performance of SOI pixel detector with a pinned depleted diode structure for X-ray astronomy
We have been developing silicon-on-insulator (SOI) pixel detectors with a pinned depleted diode (PDD) structure, named "XRPIX", for X-ray astronomy. The PDD structure is formed in a thick p-type substrate, to which high negative voltage is applied to make it fully depleted. A pinned p-well...
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Zusammenfassung: | We have been developing silicon-on-insulator (SOI) pixel detectors with a
pinned depleted diode (PDD) structure, named "XRPIX", for X-ray astronomy. The
PDD structure is formed in a thick p-type substrate, to which high negative
voltage is applied to make it fully depleted. A pinned p-well is introduced at
the backside of the insulator layer to reduce a dark current generation at the
Si-SiO$_{2}$ interface and to fix the back-gate voltage of the SOI transistors.
An n-well is further introduced between the p-well and the substrate to make a
potential barrier between them and suppress a leakage current. An optimization
study on the n-well dopant concentration is necessary because a higher dopant
concentration could result in a higher potential barrier but also in a larger
sense-node capacitance leading to a lower spectroscopic performance, and vice
versa. Based on a device simulation, we fabricated five candidate chips having
different n-well dopant concentrations. We successfully found out the best
n-well design, which suppressed a large leakage current and showed satisfactory
X-ray spectroscopic performance. Too low and too high n-well dopant
concentration chips showed a large leakage current and degraded X-ray
spectroscopic performance, respectively. We also found that the dependency of
X-ray spectroscopic performance on the n-well dopant concentration can be
largely explained by the difference in sense-node capacitance. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2401.04365 |