FLASH at DESY- free-electron laser in the X-ray range, generating a very special kind of light: extremely intense, ultrashort-pulse X-ray laser flashes.
With modern synchrotron facilities and FELs comes a need for imaging detectors with a challenging combination of demands: large area, small pixels, high frame rates, and a dynamic range spanning reliable single-photon discrimination to tens of thousands of photons per pixel and frame.
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Percival in its 2-Megapixel format “P2M” (the design also would allow for a 13-Megapixel variant) provides 1484x1408 imaging pixels of 27x27 um2 each for a total imaging area of ~ 4x4cm2. At 14e- noise, single-photon discrimination is reliable from ~ 250eV upwards, and one pixel can detect up to 3.6 Me- of charge (about 50000 photons at 250eV). Designed to run at 300Hz frame rate (faster if operated in region-of-interest mode), infancy issues of the readout periphery today still limit us to 83 Hz.
The high dynamic range is one of the key features of the sensor – enabled by auto-switching between different-size capacitors in the pixel ad hoc per pixel and per frame.
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The high frame rate for the 2Megapixel system with 2x15bit information per pixel and frame (signal as well as CDS information, and gain state) constitutes a challence both on-chip and for the whole system, and requires a high-throughput data back end to handle 20Gbit/s continuous raw data stream.
In order to enable good quantum efficiency at the soft X-ray energies where attenuation lengths are well below a micrometer, special care is needed to keep the entrance windows of the sensor both thin and free of traps or disfavourable fields.
Percival is a DESY-led collaborative effort to develop such an imager for the soft X-ray regime that today includes also Elettra Sinchrotrone Trieste, Diamond Light Source, Pohang Accelerator Laboratory, and Soleil – in addition to STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, who are designing the CMOS chip itself.
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The first prototypes have been used successfully for Ptychography at FLASH, Holography at Petra III, and – in front-illuminated configuration coupled to a scintillator – for tomography at Elettra.
As a first prototype version of the P2M sensor experienced some issues due to crosstalk and sub-optimal bias distribution, fixes in silicon were implemented and the improved “respin” chips commenced tests in 2024.