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Towards a multi-element silicon drift detector system for fluorescence spectroscopy in the soft X-ray regime

Authors :
Bufon, Jernej
Gianoncelli, Alessandra
Ahangarianabhari, Mahdi
Altissimo, Matteo
Bellutti, Pierluigi
Bertuccio, Giuseppe
Borghes, Roberto
Carrato, Sergio
Cautero, Giuseppe
Cicuttin, Andres
Crespo, Maria Liz
Fabiani, Sergio
Gandola, Massimo
Giacomini, Gabriele
Giuressi, Dario
Kourousias, George
Menk, Ralf Hendrik
Picciotto, Antonino
Piemonte, Claudio
Rachevski, Alexandre
Rashevskaya, Irina
Schillani, Stefano
Stolfa, Andrea
Vacchi, Andrea
Zampa, Gianluigi
Zampa, Nicola
Zorzi, Nicola
Bufon, Jernej
Gianoncelli, Alessandra
Ahangarianabhari, Mahdi
Altissimo, Matteo
Bellutti, Pierluigi
Bertuccio, Giuseppe
Borghes, Roberto
Carrato, Sergio
Cautero, Giuseppe
Cicuttin, Andre
Crespo, Maria Liz
Fabiani, Sergio
Gandola, Massimo
Giacomini, Gabriele
Giuressi, Dario
Kourousias, George
Menk, Ralf Hendrik
Picciotto, Antonino
Piemonte, Claudio
Rachevski, Alexandre
Rashevskaya, Irina
Schillani, Stefano
Stolfa, Andrea
Vacchi, Andrea
Zampa, Gianluigi
Zampa, Nicola
Zorzi, Nicola
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

In spite of the constant technological improvements in the field of detector development, X-ray fluorescence (XRF) in the soft X-ray regime remains a challenge. The low intrinsic fluorescence yield for energies below 2 keV indeed renders the applicability of low-energy XRF still difficult. Here, we report on a new multi-element multi-tile detection system currently under development, designed to be integrated into a soft X-ray microscopy end station. The system will be installed at the TwinMic beamline of Elettra synchrotron (Trieste, Italy) in order to increase the detected count rate by up to an order of magnitude. The new architecture is very versatile and can be adapted to any XRF experimental setup. Even though the first results of the previous version of such a multi-element system were encouraging, several issues still needed to be addressed. The system described here represents a further step in the detector evolution. It is based on four trapezoidal-shaped monolithic silicon drift detector tiles (matrices) with six hexagonal elements each equipped with a custom ultra-low noise application-specific integrated circuit readout. The whole signal processing chain has been improved leading to an overall increase in performances, namely, in terms of energy resolution and acquisition rates. The design and development of this new detection system will be described, and recent results obtained at the TwinMic beamline at Elettra will be presented. Future perspectives and improvements will also be discussed.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..c34029504985821fe420eb75e424cdc4