| Literature DB >> 23412493 |
B A Sobott1, Ch Broennimann, B Schmitt, P Trueb, M Schneebeli, V Lee, D J Peake, S Elbracht-Leong, A Schubert, N Kirby, M J Boland, C T Chantler, Z Barnea, R P Rassool.
Abstract
The performance of a single-photon-counting hybrid pixel detector has been investigated at the Australian Synchrotron. Results are compared with the body of accepted analytical models previously validated with other detectors. Detector functionals are valuable for empirical calibration. It is shown that the matching of the detector dead-time with the temporal synchrotron source structure leads to substantial improvements in count rate and linearity of response. Standard implementations are linear up to ∼0.36 MHz pixel(-1); the optimized linearity in this configuration has an extended range up to ∼0.71 MHz pixel(-1); these are further correctable with a transfer function to ∼1.77 MHz pixel(-1). This new approach has wide application both in high-accuracy fundamental experiments and in standard crystallographic X-ray fluorescence and other X-ray measurements. The explicit use of data variance (rather than N(1/2) noise) and direct measures of goodness-of-fit (χ(r)(2)) are introduced, raising issues not encountered in previous literature for any detector, and suggesting that these inadequacies of models may apply to most detector types. Specifically, parametrization of models with non-physical values can lead to remarkable agreement for a range of count-rate, pulse-frequency and temporal structure. However, especially when the dead-time is near resonant with the temporal structure, limitations of these classical models become apparent. Further, a lack of agreement at extreme count rates was evident.Entities:
Keywords: dead-time; hybrid pixel detector; single-photon counting; synchrotron fill pattern
Year: 2013 PMID: 23412493 PMCID: PMC3943545 DOI: 10.1107/S0909049513000411
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Synchrotron Radiat ISSN: 0909-0495 Impact factor: 2.616
Key parameters of the Australian Synchrotron storage ring
| Energy (GeV) | 3.0 |
| Circumference (m) | 216 |
| Harmonic number | 360 |
| Revolution time (ns) | 720.5 |
| Revolution frequency (MHz) | 1.388 |
| Nominal current (mA) | 200 |
Figure 1The standard user fill, 180 ns bunched and 240 ns bunched patterns as measured with the fill pattern monitor.
Fill parameters for the patterns shown in Fig. 1 ▶
| User fill | 180 ns bunched | 240 ns bunched | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rise time | 140 ± 10 ns | 2 ± 0.5 ns | 2 ± 0.5 ns |
| Peak | 0.9 ± 0.1 ns | 1 ± 0.1 ns | 1 ± 0.1 ns |
| Fall time | 140 ± 10 ns | 3 ± 0.6 ns | 3 ± 0.6 ns |
| Period | 720 ± 1 ns | 180 ± 1 ns | 240 ± 1 ns |
The seven nominal shaping times investigated
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| 384 ns | 260 ns | 200 ns | 170 ns | 150 ns | 130 ns | 125 ns |
Figure 2Measured rate response at each shaping time for 180 ns bunched fill. The corresponding fits are based on a minimization of equation (1), i.e. uniform fill model without pulse rejection with fixed coefficient . Subsequent offset on the y-axis for the series of nominal shaping times allowed the model inadequacy to be clearly seen.
Figure 3Measured rate response obtained from the standard user fill paralyzable detector with no pulse rejection [equation (2)] with shaping time as a free parameter. The largest shaping time was modelled well while the smallest shaping times were clearly not modelled by the expected non-bunched formula.
Figure 4Measured rate response obtained from 240 ns bunched fill with both bunched spacing and shaping time as free parameters and listed in the key with the corresponding . The rows are ordered in decreasing shaping time where the first four were best modelled by equation (7) and the last three were best modelled by equation (6).
Figure 5Measured rate response obtained from 180 ns bunched fill with both bunched spacing and shaping time as free parameters. Comparison with Fig. 2 ▶ indicates a substantial improvement in goodness of fit. The model of equation (7) was preferred for shaping times 1, 3 and 4 while the model of equation (6) was preferred for shaping times 2, 5, 6 and 7.
Figure 6Detector rate response post turnover. A rate-dependent divergence between measured and expected counts is clearly evident.
Figure 7Enlargement of Fig. 3 ▶ to reveal the large linear range of the detector. Linearity to within approximately 2% is evident at short shaping times up to approximately 0.36 MHz pixel−1. This becomes significantly non-linear at very high fluxes. However, the introduction of bunched fill substantially improves the linearity over this higher flux range.
Figure 8Enlargement of Fig. 4 ▶ to reveal the large linear range of the detector. Linearity to within approximately 2% is evident at short shaping times up to approximately 0.59 MHz pixel−1.
Figure 9Enlargement of Fig. 5 ▶ to reveal the large linear range of the detector after optimization. Linearity to within approximately 2% is evident at short shaping times up to approximately 0.71 MHz pixel−1.