Rockwell International's Science Center had previously announced the "Solid-State Photomultiplier" (SSPM), a wide-band (0.4–28 μm) detector.[1] In the late 1980s a collaboration – initially consisting of Rockwell and UCLA – began developing scintillating-fiber particle trackers for use at the Superconducting Super Collider,[2][3] based on a dedicated variant of the SSPM that came to be known as the Visible Light Photon Counter.[4]
The operating principles are similar to APDs but based on impurity-band conduction.[5] The devices are made from arsenic-doped silicon and have an impurity band 50 meV below the conduction band,[6] resulting in a gain of 40000 to 80000[5][7] at a reverse bias of only a few volts (e.g. 7 V).[5][note 1] The narrow bandgap reduces gain dispersion, resulting in a uniform response to each photon, and hence the output pulse height is proportional to the number of incident photons. VLPCs must operate at cryogenic temperatures (6–10 K).[5] They have a quantum efficiency of 85% at 565 nm[4] and a temporal resolution of several nanoseconds.[5]
^M. Atac: "Scintillating Fiber Tracking at High Luminosities using Visible Light Photon Counter Readout" pp.149-160 in Imaging Detectors In High Energy, Astroparticle And Medical Physics - Proceedings Of The UCLA International Conference, J. Park (ed.), World Scientific Publishing ISBN978-981-4530-41-5doi:10.1142/3313 (1996)
^ abB. Abbot et al.: "Studies of Visible Light Photon Counters with Fast Preamplifiers" Conference Record of the 1991 IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium and Medical Imaging Conference, Santa Fe, NM, USA, pp.369-373 ISSN1082-3654doi:10.1109/NSSMIC.1991.258956 (1991)
^ abcdeM.D. Petroff and M.G. Stapelbroek: "Photon-Counting Solid-State Photomultiplier" IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science36(1) pp.158-162. ISSN0018-9499. doi:10.1109/23.34424 (1989)
^ abK. McKay "Development of the Visible Light Photon Counter for Applications in Quantum Information Science" Dissertation, Duke University, http://hdl.handle.net/10161/4990 (2011)
^ abM. Ellis et al., “The Design, Construction and Performance of the MICE Scintillating Fibre Trackers,” Nuclear Instruments and MethodsA659 pp.136–153 doi:10.1016/j.nima.2011.04.041 (2011)
^D. Adams et al.: "Performance of a Large Scale Scintillating Fiber Tracker Using VLPC Readout" IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science42(4) pp.401-406 ISSN0018-9499doi:10.1109/23.467812 (1995)
^D0 Collaboration: “The Upgraded D0 Detector” Nuclear Instruments and MethodsA565 pp.463–537 doi:10.1016/j.nima.2006.05.248 (2006)