last update: 15-Aug-00
General
Remarks
Numerous observations
have led to the result that damage effects by energetic particles in the
bulk of any material can be described as being proportional to the so called
displacement
damage cross section D. This quantity is equivalent to
the Non Ionizing
Energy
Loss
(NIEL)
and hence the proportionality
between the NIEL-value and the resulting damage effects is referred to
as the NIEL-scaling hypothesis
(for deviations to this rule see below). D is normally quantified in [MeVmb],
whereas the NIEL-value is given in [keVcm²/g]. For silicon with
A=28.086 g/mol the relation between D and
NIEL
is: 100MeVmb=2.144 keVcm²/g. The
D or NIEL value is depending on the particle type and energy. According
to an ASTM standard, the displacement damage cross section for 1
MeV neutrons is set as a normalizing value:
Dn(1MeV) = 95
MeVmb. On the basis of the NIEL scaling the damage efficiency of
any particle with a given kinetic energy E
can then be described by the hardness factor
k,
defined as kparticle (E)=Dparticle/Dn(1MeVn).
Therefore, instead of D(E) the normalized values
D(E)/95MeVmb
are
listed in this compilation.
The NIEL-value can also be referred to as the displacement-KERMA, i.e. the Kinetic Energy Released to MAtter (in this case silicon). The quantity, no matter whether envisoned as D, NIEL or KERMA, is responsible for displacements of atoms in the crystal lattice. These displacements are actually causing the damage effects to be seen in the behaviour of the silicon bulk, leading to the deterioration effects of the detector properties. In contrast to the displacement kerma one has to view the pure ionization losses, monitored by the radiation dose as causing the damage effects related to the surface and interface layers of the detectors and electronics. It should be noted that these two quantities have strictly to be distinguished. They are in no way proportional to each other. Here we deal only with the bulk damage effects and hence document only the knowledge on the displacement damage cross section resp. its relative value D/95MeVmb.
From the available literature only those tabulations are selected which proved (as to the physics approach behind and also in comparison to existing experimental data) to be the most reliable ones. E.g. the old and widely used Fermi-Lab compilation provided by Van Ginneken (FN-522, 1989) had to be rejected as its results are too coarse, did not include important physical features and proved to be largely wrong at high energies. From later compilations finally the following sources had been exclusively selected as best:
neutrons:
P.J. Griffin et
al., SAND92-0094 (Sandia Natl. Lab.93), priv. comm. 1996: E = 1.025E-10
- 1.995E+01 MeV
A. Konobeyev, J.
Nucl. Mater. 186 (1992) 117: E = 2.000E+01 - 8.000E+02 MeV
M. Huhtinen and
P.A. Aarnio, NIM A 335 (1993) 580 and priv. comm.:
E = 8.050E+02 -
8.995E+03 MeV
protons:
G.P. Summers et
al., IEEE NS40 (1993) 1372: E = 1.000E-03 - 2.000E+02 MeV
M. Huhtinen and
P.A. Aarnio, NIM A 335 (1993) 580 and priv. comm.: E = 1.500E+01 -
9.005E+03 MeV
pions:
M. Huhtinen and
P.A. Aarnio, NIM A 335 (1993) 580 and priv. comm.:
E = 1.500E+01 -
9.005E+03 MeV
electrons:
G.P. Summers et
al., IEEE NS40 (1993) 1372: E = 3.000E-01 - 2.000E+02 MeV
A
warning about the applicability of the NIEL scaling hypothesis:
The following two
examples may be taken as evidence that the NIEL scaling hypothesis should
not be regarded as a universally and ideally valid rule. In fact it can
be argued that the real damage depends not only on the integral NIEL value,
which summarizes all existing reaction channels with their respective recoil
energy distributions folded with the efficiency for producing displacements,
but that it might also depend on the specifics of these energy transfers,
which are not entirely described by the NIEL value. Hence one has to be
cautious in applying the NIEL scaling as a strict rule. Its application
is however always useful, in order to cancel out most of the particle and
energy dependences of the observed damage in silicon detectors.
1. Difference
between proton and neutron induced damage:
Recently it was found
by the CERN-RD48 (ROSE) collaboration, that the NIEL scaling does not hold
ideally for charged hadrons. In fact detecors fabricated using the ROSE
developed radiation hardening by Oxygenation (DOFZ), show appreciably less
damage caused by high energy protons or pions than that due to neutrons
if normalized to the NIEL equivalent fluence. Although this effect is restricted
to the change in the effective doping concentrational it is of course largely
favorable for the applications in the inner region of the LHC tracking
detectors as in that region the overall radiation field is governed by
pions. The obtained improvements of the radiation tolerance are described
in the latest ROSE status report CERN-LHCC-2000-009 (see ROSEstatus
reports).
2. Reduced damage
by electrons:
Comparing damage effects
of hadrons with that produced by electrons one observes an even worse breaking
down of the NIEL hypothesis. As an example, the relative hardness of 1.8
MeV electrons is according to Summers (see above) D/95MeVmb = 2.3E-02.
The current related damage rate for this energy had been measured to be
4.5E-20 A/cm*) and hence the NIEL normalized value would be 2E-18 A/cm.
However for neutrons, protons and pions a universal value of 8E-17
A/cm had been found under the same experimental conditions (prompt measurement
at 20C). Thus the electrons of that energy appear to be less damaging than
hadrons by a factor of 40. The reason for this is most likely twofold:
For hadron irradiation an abundance of displacement clusters is formed
via nuclear interaction leading to a high generation current whereas for
electrons this part is almost negligible. In addition the Coulomb interaction,
responsible solely for the energy transfer by electrons, leads to much
lower Si recoil energies and such a higher ratio of close pairs is formed
among the primary Frenkel defects. Recombining to a large degree, these
close pairs will consequently not produce any permanent damage.
*) R. Wunstorf, PhD
thesis 1992, DESY-FH1K-92-01
Forthcoming
publication:
A much more detailed
discussion of the whole NIEL-issue, commenting also the following tabulations
and figures will be given in a forthcoming paper:
A. Vasilescu (INPE
Bucharest) and G. Lindström (Univ. of Hamburg):
Fluence Normalization
of Radiation Damage in Silicon Detectors.
The reader is also
referred to:
A. Vasilescu (INPE
Bucharest) and G. Lindström (Univ. of Hamburg):
Notes on the fluence
normalisation based on the NIEL scaling hypothesis, ROSE/TN/2000-02,
to be accessed under
ROSE-Technical Notes 2000 in the
ROSE
homepage
Links
to the tabulations of the relative damage functions:
note: the .ps- resp.
.pdf-files aretransscripted versions of the excel files.
| neutrons.xls
neutrons.ps neutrons.pdf |
protons.xls
protons.ps protons.pdf |
pions.xls
pions.ps pions.pdf |
electrons.xls
electrons.ps electrons.pdf |
Links
to ps- resp. pdf-files in picture book:
| NIEL-n.ps
NIEL-n.pdf (neutrons E: 10e-10 - 10e+04 MeV) |
NIEL-nr.ps
NIEL-nr.pdf (neutrons E: 10e-04 - 10e+04 MeV) |
| NIEL-p.ps
NIEL-p.pdf (protons E:10e-03 -10e+04 MeV) |
NIEL-pr.ps
NIEL-pr.pdf (protons E: 10e+00 - 10e+04 MeV) |
| NIEL-pi.ps
NIEL-pi.pdf (pions E: 10e+01 - 10e+04 MeV) |
NIEL-e.ps
NIEL-e.pdf (electrons E: 10e-01 - 10e+03 MeV) |
| NIEL-all.ps
NIEL-all.pdf (n, p, pi, e E: 10e-10 - 10e+04 MeV) |
NIEL-allr.ps
NIEL-allr.pdf (n, p, pi, e E: 10e-04 - 10e+04 MeV) |
Use
of this compilation:
You are welcome to
use these freely, however in any publication or report a reference should
be given as follows:
A. Vasilescu (INPE
Bucharest) and G. Lindstroem (University of Hamburg),
Displacement damage
in silicon, on-line compilation
For any questions and/or
comments please contact us via email:
gunnar@sesam.desy.de;
angela@ifin.nipne.ro