Subpixel response of SOI pixel sensor for X-ray astronomy with pinned depleted diode: first result from mesh experiment

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Published 5 June 2019 © 2019 IOP Publishing Ltd and Sissa Medialab
, , The 9th International Workshop on Semiconductor Pixel Detectors for Particles and Imaging Citation K. Kayama et al 2019 JINST 14 C06005 DOI 10.1088/1748-0221/14/06/C06005

1748-0221/14/06/C06005

Abstract

We have been developing a monolithic active pixel sensor, "XRPIX", for the Japan led future X-ray astronomy mission "FORCE" observing the X-ray sky in the energy band of 1–80 keV with angular resolution of better than 15''. XRPIX is an upper part of a stack of two sensors of an imager system onboard FORCE, and covers the X-ray energy band lower than 20 keV . The XRPIX device consists of a fully depleted high-resistivity silicon sensor layer for X-ray detection, a low resistivity silicon layer for CMOS readout circuit, and a buried oxide layer in between, which is fabricated with 0.2 μm CMOS silicon-on-insulator (SOI) technology. Each pixel has a trigger circuit with which we can achieve a 10 μs time resolution, a few orders of magnitude higher than that with X-ray astronomy CCDs. We recently introduced a new type of a device structure, a pinned depleted diode (PDD), in the XRPIX device, and succeeded in improving the spectral performance, especially in a readout mode using the trigger function. In this paper, we apply a mesh experiment to the XRPIX devices for the first time in order to study the spectral response of the PDD device at the subpixel resolution. We confirmed that the PDD structure solves the significant degradation of the charge collection efficiency at the pixel boundaries and in the region under the pixel circuits, which is found in the single SOI structure, the conventional type of the device structure. On the other hand, the spectral line profiles are skewed with low energy tails and the line peaks slightly shift near the pixel boundaries, which contribute to a degradation of the energy resolution.

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10.1088/1748-0221/14/06/C06005