| Literature DB >> 25540471 |
James F Christian1, Christopher J Stapels1, Erik B Johnson1, Mickel McClish1, Purushotthom Dokhale1, Kanai S Shah1, Sharmistha Mukhopadhyay1, Eric Chapman1, Frank L Augustine2.
Abstract
Solid-state photomultipliers (SSPMs) are a compact, lightweight, potentially low-cost alternative to a photomultiplier tube for a variety of scintillation detector applications, including digital-dosimeter and medical-imaging applications. Manufacturing SSPMs with a commercial CMOS process provides the ability for rapid prototyping, and facilitates production to reduce the cost. RMD designs CMOS SSPM devices that are fabricated by commercial foundries. This work describes the characterization and performance of these devices for scintillation detector applications. This work also describes the terms contributing to device noise in terms of the excess noise of the SSPM, the binomial statistics governing the number of pixels triggered by a scintillation event, and the background, or thermal, count rate. The fluctuations associated with these terms limit the resolution of the signal pulse amplitude. We explore the use of pixel-level signal conditioning, and characterize the performance of a prototype SSPM device that preserves the digital nature of the signal. In addition, we explore designs of position-sensitive SSPM detectors for medical imaging applications, and characterize their performance.Entities:
Keywords: APD; CMOS; GPD; Photodetector; Scintillation detector; Solid-state Photomultiplier
Year: 2010 PMID: 25540471 PMCID: PMC4273941 DOI: 10.1016/j.nima.2010.03.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nucl Instrum Methods Phys Res A ISSN: 0168-9002 Impact factor: 1.455