학술논문

First experimental data from XH, a fine pitch germanium microstrip detector for energy dispersive EXAFS (EDE)
Document Type
Conference
Source
2007 IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record, 2007. NSS '07. IEEE. 4:2421-2428 Oct, 2007
Subject
Nuclear Engineering
Power, Energy and Industry Applications
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Germanium
Microstrip
Detectors
Dispersion
Electromagnetic wave absorption
Chemical analysis
Synchrotrons
Laboratories
Strips
Linearity
Language
ISSN
1082-3654
Abstract
Extended X-Ray Absorption Fine Structure (EXAFS) is an experimental technique to determine the chemical structure of a sample by analysing modulations within its X-ray absorpton spectrum. The technique is commonly undertaken at synchrotron sources. A development to this technique, Energy Dispersive EXAFS (EDE), allows spectra to be collected extremely quickly enabling rapid chemical changes in a sample to be investigated. A number of the detection systems developed for this purpose have been reported previously. XSTRIP for High Energies (XH) is a new detector system developed between Daresbury Laboratory and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) specifically for EDE on 3rd generation synchrotrons. XH was commissioned to collect data at high energies (up to 40keV) with good efficiency, spatial performance and radiation damage tolerant. A key element of the system, a 1024 element germanium microstrip detector, fabricated using the amorphous-germanium (a-Ge) contact technology developed at LBNL allowing a strip pitch of 50μm to be achieved. The detector has been married to the UK designed X2CHIP readout technology which provides excellent system linearity (better than 0.1%) and ultra fast readout performance (100kHz frame rates). This paper will detail the construction of the detector and report on the first results from the system commissioning on beamlines 9.3 (at the Daresbury SRS) and ID24 (at the ESRF) where samples were studied at high energies.