Femtosecond radiation experiment detector for X-ray Free-Electron Laser (XFEL) coherent x-ray imaging

2008 
A pixel array detector (PAD) is being developed at Cornell University for the collection of diffuse diffraction data in anticipation of coherent x-ray imaging experiments that will be conducted at the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC). The detector is designed to collect x-rays scattered from femtosecond pulses produced by the LCLS x-ray laser at framing rates up to 120Hz. Because x-rays will arrive on femtosecond time scales, the detector must be able to deal with instantaneous count-rates in excess of 10 17 photons per second per pixel. A low-noise integrating front-end allows the detector to simultaneously distinguish single photon events in low-flux regions of the diffraction pattern while recording up to several thousand x-rays per pixel in more intense regions. The detector features a per-pixel programmable two-level gain control that can be used to create an arbitrary 2-D, two-level gain pattern across the detector; massively parallel 14-bit in-pixel digitization; and frame rates in excess of 120Hz. The first full-scale detector will be 758 x 758 pixels with a pixel size of 110 × 110 microns made by tiling CMOS ASICs that are bump-bonded to high-resistivity silicon diodes. X-ray testing data of the first 185 × 194 pixel bump-bonded ASICs is presented. The measurements presented include confirmation of single photon sensitivity, pixel response profiles indicating a nearly single-pixel point spread function, radiation damage measurements and noise performance.
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