Radiation effects and noise evolution in NewAthena WFI flight-production sensors
Radiation effects and noise evolution in NewAthena WFI flight-production sensors
Valentin Emberger, Johannes Müller-Seidlitz, Luisa Ostler, Wolfgang Treberer-Treberspurg, Robert Andritschke, Annika Behrens, Günter Hauser, Peter Lechner, Astrid Mayr, Leonie Sommer
AbstractThe Wide Field Imager (WFI), one of the two instruments on ESA's next large X-ray observatory NewAthena, is designed for imaging spectroscopy in the 0.2-15 keV range, combining a large field of view with high count-rate capability. Its focal plane is equipped with back-illuminated DEPFET (Depleted p-channel field-effect transistor) sensors that offer high radiation tolerance and provide near Fano-limited energy resolution. Achieving this performance requires an exceptionally low readout noise, with about 3 electrons ENC expected at beginning of life. Consequently, the devices are highly sensitive to radiation-induced changes in noise behavior. In this work, we investigate the impact of both total non-ionizing dose (TNID) and total ionizing dose (TID) on the relevant noise components, including their temperature dependence. A detector module containing a 64x64-pixel sensor from a flight-production wafer was irradiated with 62.4 MeV protons at the MedAustron accelerator facility in Wiener Neustadt to a total dose equivalent to 2.6 $\cdot$ 10$^9$ 10-MeV-protons/cm$^2$. The detector was fully biased and operated throughout the irradiation and subsequent measurements, maintaining the nominal operating temperature of 213 K. To study short-term annealing behavior at low temperature, a second, identical module was exposed to a comparable proton dose within a much shorter timescale by exploiting the available high beam flux. TID effects were investigated separately by irradiating another device with 17.4 keV Mo-K_alpha X-rays to a total dose of 15 Gy. We report the resulting changes in readout noise, dark current, and threshold voltage, and compare them with results from an earlier irradiation campaign using pre-flight sensors. Implications for the instrument's required operating temperature and its expected end-of-life performance are discussed.