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Soft x ray window encapsulant for HgI2 detectorsHgI2 is an excellent semiconductor material for a low energy, room temperature x-ray spectrometer. The high values of the atomic numbers for its constituent elements gives high x-ray and gamma ray stopping power. The band gap of HgI2 is significantly higher than other commonly used semiconductors. Owing to the large value band gap, the leakage current for HgI2 devices is smaller, thus allowing low noise performance. Devices fabricated from HgI2 crystals have demonstrated energy resolution sufficient to distinguish the x-ray emission from the neighboring elements on the periodic table. Also the power requirements of HgI2 are very low. These characteristics make a HgI2 spectrometer an ideal component in a satellite based detection system. Unfortunately, HgI2 crystals tend to deteriorate with time, even if protected by standard semiconductor encapsulants. This degradation ruins the performance of the device in terms of its energy resolution and pulse amplitude. The degrading mechanism is believed to be material loss occurring from below the electrodes, due to high vapor pressure of HgI2 at room temperature. To address this major obstacle to rapid expansion of HgI2 technology, a research program aimed at improving device stability by encapsulation with inert polymeric materials was carried out. The program focused specifically on optimizing the encapsulant materials and their deposition techniques. The principal objectives for this program were device encapsulation, device testing, and accelerated testing to ensure very long term stability of these high resolution sensors. A variety of encapsulants were investigated with the selection criteria based on their chemical diffusion barrier properties, mechanical stability, reactivity, and morphology of encapsulant films. The investigation covered different classes of encapsulants including solvent based encapsulants, vapor deposited encapsulants, and plasma polymerized encapsulants. A variety of characterization techniques were employed to examine their effectiveness in stabilizing HgI2 devices; these included permeability evaluation, vacuum and heat testing, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) as well as studying the detector performance of coated detectors. The plasma polymerized films appear to have entirely solved the HgI2 degradation problem. Another achievement of this program was the development of an accelerated testing technique which correlates extremely well with long term tesing.
Document ID
19930004517
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Contractor Report (CR)
Authors
Entine, G.
(Radiation Monitoring Devices, Inc. Watertown, MA, United States)
Shah, K.
(Radiation Monitoring Devices, Inc. Watertown, MA, United States)
Squillante, M.
(Radiation Monitoring Devices, Inc. Watertown, MA, United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
June 30, 1987
Subject Category
Optics
Report/Patent Number
NAS 1.26:190850
NASA-CR-190850
Report Number: NAS 1.26:190850
Report Number: NASA-CR-190850
Accession Number
93N13705
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAS7-931
CONTRACT_GRANT: SBIR-08.07-1167
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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