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The Microanalysis System

What makes a Good Detector?

The Pulse Processor

 

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System Components
EDS detector components
How the EDS detector works

 

The Microanalysis System

 

How the EDS Detector Works

 

The EDS detector converts the energy of each individual X-ray into a voltage signal of proportional size. This is achieved through a three stage process. Firstly the X-ray is converted into a charge by the ionization of atoms in the semiconductor crystal. Secondly this charge is converted into the voltage signal by the FET preamplifier. Finally the voltage signal is input into the pulse processor for measurement.  The output from the preamplifier is a voltage ‘ramp’ where each X-ray appears as a voltage step on the ramp.

 

EDS detectors are designed to convert the X-ray energy into the voltage signal as accurately as possible. At the same time electronic noise must be minimized to allow detection of the lowest X-ray energies.

 

How the crystal converts X-ray energy into charge

 

When an incident X-ray strikes the detector crystal its energy is absorbed by a series of ionizations within the semiconductor to create a number of electron-hole pairs. The electrons are raised into the conduction band of the semiconductor and are free to move within the crystal lattice. When an electron is raised into the conduction band it leaves behind a ‘hole’, which behaves like a free positive charge within the crystal. A high bias voltage, applied between electrical contacts on the front face and back of the crystal, then sweeps the electrons and holes to these opposite electrodes, producing a charge signal, the size of which is directly proportional to the energy of the incident X-ray.

 

The role of the FET

 

The charge is converted to a voltage signal by the FET preamplifier. During operation, charge is built up on the feedback capacitor. There are two sources of this charge, current leakage from the crystal caused by the bias voltage applied between its faces, and the X-ray induced charge that is to be measured. The output from the FET caused by this charge build-up is a steadily increasing voltage ‘ramp’ due to leakage current, onto which is superimposed sharp steps due to the charge created by each X-ray event. This accumulating charge has to be periodically restored to prevent saturation of the preamplifier. Therefore at a pre-determined charge level the capacitor is discharged, a process called restoration. Restoration can be achieved either by pulsed optical restore where light from an LED is shone onto the FET, or by using direct injection of charge into a specially designed FET.

 

The noise is strongly influenced by the FET, and noise determines the resolution of a detector particularly at low energies. Low noise is also required to distinguish low energy X-rays such as beryllium from noise fluctuations (Fig. 5) . Direct charge restoration via the FET introduces less noise than optical restore. At high count rates, the restoration periods limit the maximum output rate and any after-effects of the restoration (Fig. 4) will affect pulse measurement. Direct charge restoration via the FET is considerably faster and avoids the after-effects associated with optical restore so that noise and resolution are less likely to degrade with increasing count rate.

 

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