6533b7d8fe1ef96bd126aeae

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Development of new CdZnTe detectors for room-temperature high-flux radiation measurements

Leonardo AbbeneGiuseppe RasoGaetano GerardiManuele BettelliG. BenassiNicola ZambelliAndrea ZappettiniFabio Principato

subject

Nuclear and High Energy PhysicsPreamplifier02 engineering and technologydigital pulse shape analysiRadiation01 natural scienceslaw.inventionPlanarOpticstravelling heater methodlaw0103 physical scienceshigh fluxInstrumentationenergy-resolved photon-counting detectorsNuclear and High Energy PhysicPhysicsRadiationdigital pulse shape analysis010308 nuclear & particles physicsbusiness.industryCdZnTe detectorsCdZnTe detectorDetectorSettore FIS/01 - Fisica SperimentaleX-ray and γ-ray detectorenergy-resolved photon-counting detector021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyCathodeSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)Anodegold electroless contactFull width at half maximumX-ray and -ray detectors0210 nano-technologybusinessVoltage

description

Recently, CdZnTe (CZT) detectors have been widely proposed and developed for room-temperature X-ray spectroscopy even at high fluxes, and great efforts have been made on both the device and the crystal growth technologies. In this work, the performance of new travelling-heater-method (THM)-grown CZT detectors, recently developed at IMEM-CNR Parma, Italy, is presented. Thick planar detectors (3 mm thick) with gold electroless contacts were realised, with a planar cathode covering the detector surface (4.1 mm × 4.1 mm) and a central anode (2 mm × 2 mm) surrounded by a guard-ring electrode. The detectors, characterized by low leakage currents at room temperature (4.7 nA cm−2 at 1000 V cm−1), allow good room-temperature operation even at high bias voltages (>7000 V cm−1). At low rates (200 counts s−1), the detectors exhibit an energy resolution around 4% FWHM at 59.5 keV (241Am source) up to 2200 V, by using commercial front-end electronics (A250F/NF charge-sensitive preamplifier, Amptek, USA; nominal equivalent noise charge of 100 electrons RMS). At high rates (1 Mcounts s−1), the detectors, coupled to a custom-designed digital pulse processing electronics developed at DiFC of University of Palermo (Italy), show low spectroscopic degradations: energy resolution values of 8% and 9.7% FWHM at 59.5 keV (241Am source) were measured, with throughputs of 0.4% and 60% at 1 Mcounts s−1, respectively. An energy resolution of 7.7% FWHM at 122.1 keV (57Co source) with a throughput of 50% was obtained at 550 kcounts s−1 (energy resolution of 3.2% at low rate). These activities are in the framework of an Italian research project on the development of energy-resolved photon-counting systems for high-flux energy-resolved X-ray imaging.

10.1107/s1600577517000194http://hdl.handle.net/10447/226275