When a semiconductor detector with a p-type impurity is put
under stress, it can detect lower energy photons than it could when unstressed. This
surprising behavior can be understood (with a little waving of the hands) because the
photon must break bonds in the detector to be detected, and if the detector is already
under mechanical stress the bonds are easier to break. This effect was first used in far
infrared detectors by MIPS co-Is Eugene Haller and Paul Richards. The way we have implemented stressed Ge:Ga detectors is shown in the figure on the right. A multi-fingered, double-sided clamp is made of very strong steel (Aermet 100), and five detectors are placed on each side of this clamp. Each detector can be stressed individually by tightening the screw on that detector's finger, bending the finger like a leaf spring. The stresses are distributed over the detector by a pressure plate, so it doesn't break. To make a full 2x20 array, we mount four of these 2x5 modules together, along with condensing cone feed optics to lead the photons into the detectors. See figure that illustrates the complete array with condensing cones and heat sink. The 160 micron array was built at the University of Arizona, with help from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. |
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