High resolution x-ray spectroscopy using GaAs arrays
- 15 November 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by AIP Publishing in Journal of Applied Physics
- Vol. 90 (10) , 5376-5381
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1406546
Abstract
We have produced a number of small format gallium arsenide (GaAs) arrays to address the material, electronic, and technological problems that need to be solved in order to develop mega pixel, Fano-limited spectroscopic x-ray imagers. Results will be presented of a series of x-ray measurements carried out on a prototype 5×5 array, fabricated from 40 μm thick epitaxial GaAs. The device has pixel sizes of 200×200 μm2 and pitch 250 μm. As a preliminary investigation of performance, two pixels have been instrumented. Measurements from 5.9 to 98 keV were carried out both in our laboratory and at the Hamburger Synchrotronstrahlungslabor research facility in Hamburg, Germany. Both pixels were found to be remarkably uniform, both in their spectral and spatial response to x-rays. The average nonlinearity in the spectral response is <1% across the energy range 5.9–98 keV. Using a 12 keV, 20×20 μm2 pencil beam, the spatial uniformity was found to be better than 98% over the entire pixel surfaces, consistent with the statistical precision of the measurement. The energy resolution at −40 °C is 400 eV full width at half maximum (FWHM) at 5.9 keV rising to 700 eV FWHM at 98 keV. No difference in energy resolution was found between full area and pencil beam illumination. An analysis of the resolution function has shown that the detector is dominated by electronic noise at low energies and Fano noise at energies above 30 keV. By best-fitting the expected resolution function to the entire data set, we derive a Fano factor of 0.140±0.05, together with a charge transport factor as low as 1.4×10−3. Further improvement in the resolution function has been achieved by replacing the conventional resistive feedback preamplifiers with a new resistorless design, which provides a lower component of electronic noise. In this case, a resolution of 266 eV FWHM at 5.9 keV has been achieved at room temperature (23 °C) and 219 eV FWHM with only modest cooling (−31 °C). The expected Fano noise at this energy is ∼140 eV.This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
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