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Last Measurement on GEM and Literature review of Conduction in Polymers Gabriele Croci (CERN) GDD Meeting March, the 20th 2008 1 Leakage Current in 10x10 GEM ZOOM 2 Leakage Current in Cu covered Kapton Foil (GEM 10X10 without holes) 3 Comparison Holes/No Holes The major effect seems to come from surface conduction 4 REFERENCES [1] P. Keith Watson, “The transport and Trapping of Electrons in Polymers”, IEEE Transaction on Dielectrics and Electrical Insulation, Vol. 2 No 5. October 1995 [2] John J. Simmons, “Poole-Frankel Effect and Schottky Effect in Metal-Insulator-Metal Systems”, Physical Review, Volume 155,3, 15 March 1967 [3] E. Motyl, “Electrode Effects and Electrical Conduction in Polyimide Kapton HN Films”, IEEE Internation Conference on Conduction and Breakdown in Solid Dielectrics, June 22-25 1998 [4] J-P Salveat et al “Onset and growth of conduction in polyimide Kapton induced by swift heavyion irradiation”, Physical Review B, Volume 55, Number 10, 1 March 1997-II [5] A. Rose, “Space-Charge Limited Currents in Solids”, Physical Review Volume 97, Number 6, March 15, 1955 [6] Edward J. Yadlowsky, Robert C. Hazelton, “Radiation Induced conduction in Kapton H Film”, IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science, Volume 35, No 4, August 1988 [7] R.G. Filho et al, “Induced conductivity Of Mylar and Kapton Irradiated by X-Rays”, IEEE Transactions on Electrical Insulation Volume EI-21 No. 3, June 1986 5 General Polymer Description • A polymer is a substance composed of molecules with large molecular mass composed of repeating structural units, or monomers, connected by covalent chemical bonds • Poliymide (Kapton, dielectric used in GEM) belongs to the polymer family 6 General statements about Conduction in Polymers • Polymers conductivity can be due to the small number of low-mobility charge carriers and to the high trap density [1] • The traps can play a very important role in the carrier recombination process; they can trap carriers and release them in a successive time [1] • Mobility changes of several order of magnitude with respect the free (without traps) mobility • Dependence on temperature, applied electric field and particle (e-, p+, X-rays, Ions..) irradiation 7 Energy Band Diagram in a Polymer [1] • Slight difference from organized structure like metals or semiconductors • The conduction band edge is substituted by the mobility edge and we can keep the concept of valence band • The trap levels are usually between this two states • Tentative to discover the energy distribution of these trapping states injecting electrons inside the polymer 8 Some possible origins of trapping centers • • • • • • Impurities in the material [2] Presence of Radicals in the polymer Chemical structure of polymer chain Open covalent (0,C) bounds Regions of free volumes …. 9 Charge Trapping and Decay (1)[1] • The model described in [1] does not take into account retrapping after a charge is released by a trap: this holds for thin polymers • The current flowing in the polymer is a function of the energy density of the traps • Definition of a trapping parameter α=1/μτE (μ:mobility, τ:characteristic time, E: electric field in the polymer) • Electron is shallow states are rapidly detrapped and are driven more deeply in the material by the field 10 Charge Trapping and Decay (2) • The charge detrapped can contribute to the conduction and can accumulate on the surface of the polymer • Measurement of Surface Potentials (Vs) with time 11 Other Possible Conduction Mechanisms [2],[3],[4] • • • • • Poole-Frenkel effect Schottky Effect Hopping Tunneling Space charge limited currents 12 Poole-Freknel Effect • P-F: field-assisted thermal ionization; lowering of a Coulombic potential barrier with an electric field; it is associated with the lowering of a trap barrier in the bulk • Change of work function: W W- eβPFE½ • Change of conductivity: σ=σ0exp(βPFE½/kT) 13 Schottky Effect • Very similar to Poole-Frenkel Effect. It is the attenuation of a metal-insulator barrier arising from electrode image force interaction. It is a surface effect • Change of conductivity similar to P-F σ=σ0exp(βsE½/kT) • βPF=2βs 14 Hopping Models[4] • Presence of π-conjugated bonds; phonon assisted tunneling between localized states • Two basic processes: local jumping between adjacent sites and “percolation” • A hop between two localized electronic states occurs when the atomic vibratory motion changes the relaive energy of the localized states • Two kinds of hops – Adiabatic: large electron energy transfer between states; jump rate not limited by electron energy transfer or distance between sites – Non Adiabatic: low electron energy transfer; jump rate limited by transfer energy and distances 15 Tunneling and Space Charge Limited Current • Tunneling is the quantum effect of passing through a barrier also if the energy is not enough to overcame the barrier itself • Space charge limited current[5]: maximum current that can flow in a built-up capacitor charged with static charges. The current can be enhanced by PF effect. Current density has a voltage square dependence 16 Radiation Induced Conduction in Kapton H Film [6] • 8 μm thick kapton irradiated by 45 KeV penetrating electrons • I-V characteristic depends on the voltage applied to the irradiated sample: – Low Voltage (<50V): Ohmic regime, Linear I-V Characteristic – Intermediate Voltage (50V<V<700V): Space Charge Limited Current (SCL) regime, I proportional to V2 – High Voltage (>700V): Trap Filled limit regime (TFL), I exponentially proportional to V 17 Conduction Model [6] • This is the math form of previous statements 2 V V V 2 hV kT J Aohmic BSLC 3 CTFL e L L L It is possible to see three different regimes at different voltage values for current density The constant A,B,C take into account all the parameters of the material and of the irradiation; h take into account also the energy gap over which the traps are distributed 18 Induced Conductivity of Mylar and Kapton Irradiated by X-Rays [7] • Kapton Samples of 80 mm diameter with thickness varying from 6 to 75 μm were irradiated with W X-Rays for several hours • Electric field (of different intensity) were applied to the samples • They saw a variation of the Kapton conductivity 19 Induced Conductivity of Mylar and Kapton Irradiated by X-Rays [7] (2) From my calculation and considering the rate we are using in our lab to test GEM, we are very close to the black curve Next week I will perform this kind of measurement irradiating a 10x10 GEM for several hours to see if there is a variation of the conductivity 20 Measurement of Induced Conductivity inside a copper-clad kapton foil (GEM w/o holes) This copper-clad kapton foil was powered with 500 V and irradiated at very high rate in open air with Cu X-Rays to understand if irradiation will vary its conducibility. Since measurement was performed in open air, air ionisation maybe a problem. 21 Measurement of Induced Conductivity inside a copper-clad kapton foil (GEM w/o holes) Literature K thickness 25 um E = 8 x 104 V/cm W X-Rays There is a slope 0.3 pA/hour We should get rid of air ionisation!! HV OFF, X-RAYS OFF HV ON, X-RAYS OFF HV ON, X-RAYS ON 22 Triple GEM Sealed Detector with 2D (strips) readout • Goal: – This detector is using the same material as TOTEM chambers – Make a series of measurement before putting this detector in beam of neutrons and hadrons – We would like to know if the performance of the detector is changed after strong hadronic irradiation – Test of Radiation Hardness of the material 23 Series of measurements to be performed • • • • • • • • Gain Maximum Gain Rate Capability Discharge Probability Time Scan: Same Time Time Scan: On Before Position Scan 2D Test 24 Gain Measurement 8.9 keV X-Rays Reading 16*3 Y Strips 25 Rate Capability 8.9 keV X-Rays Reading 16*3 Y Strips 26 2D Acquisition Test 5.9 KeV X-rays (55Fe) Pedestal around 100 ADC Ch Reading 16*3 X and Y Strips Triggering on X Strips 27 On Before Time Scan Triple Standard GEM 8.9 keV X-Rays Reading 16*3 Y Strips 28 Last Year Measurements TRIPLE STANDARD GEM 3 cm x 3 cm GEMs SINGLE STANDARD GEM 29 New Ideas for GEM Gating April, the 24th 2008 30 Experimental Setup 8.9 keV Copper X-Rays A Ed 2 mm B ET1 3 mm PreAmp GEM Gate GEM C ET2 7 mm Bot GEM EI 2 mm 31 PH Spectrum Ar/CO2 70%/30% C B A Pedestal PreAmpGEM Gain ~ 10 BotGEM Gain >=1000 32 Measurement without PreGEM PH Spectra Standard GEM Ar/CO2 70%/30% 350 300 Counts 250 200 Inverted ED VPreGEM = 0 V ET1 = 150 V/cm ET2 = 300 V/cm VBotGEM = 510 V EI = 3 kV/cm C VGateGEM VGateGEM VGateGEM VGateGEM = = = = 0V 10 V 20 V 30 V B 150 100 50 0 -50 0 500 1000 ADC Channels Pedestal 33 Measurement without PreGEM Electron Transparency Standard GEM Ar/CO2 70%/30% Electron Transparency 35 Electron Transparency (%) 30 25 20 15 Inverted ED VPreGEM = 0 V ET1 = 150 V/cm ET2 = 300 V/cm VBotGEM = 510 V EI = 3 kV/cm 10 5 0 -5 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 V Gate GEM (V) 34 Pieter’s Measurements 35