UMD Theses and Dissertations

Permanent URI for this collectionhttp://hdl.handle.net/1903/3

New submissions to the thesis/dissertation collections are added automatically as they are received from the Graduate School. Currently, the Graduate School deposits all theses and dissertations from a given semester after the official graduation date. This means that there may be up to a 4 month delay in the appearance of a given thesis/dissertation in DRUM.

More information is available at Theses and Dissertations at University of Maryland Libraries.

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    INTEGRATED SINGLE-PHOTON SENSING AND PROCESSING PLATFORM IN STANDARD CMOS
    (2013) Nouri, Babak; Abshire, Pamela A; Electrical Engineering; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
    Practical implementation of large SPAD-based sensor arrays in the standard CMOS process has been fraught with challenges due to the many performance trade-offs existing at both the device and the system level [1]. At the device level the performance challenge stems from the suboptimal optical characteristics associated with the standard CMOS fabrication process. The challenge at the system level is the development of monolithic readout architecture capable of supporting the large volume of dynamic traffic, associated with multiple single-photon pixels, without limiting the dynamic range and throughput of the sensor. Due to trade-offs in both functionality and performance, no general solution currently exists for an integrated single-photon sensor in standard CMOS single photon sensing and multi-photon resolution. The research described herein is directed towards the development of a versatile high performance integrated SPAD sensor in the standard CMOS process. Towards this purpose a SPAD device with elongated junction geometry and a perimeter field gate that features a large detection area and a highly reduced dark noise has been presented and characterized. Additionally, a novel front-end system for optimizing the dynamic range and after-pulsing noise of the pixel has been developed. The pixel is also equipped with an output interface with an adjustable pulse width response. In order to further enhance the effective dynamic range of the pixel a theoretical model for accurate dead time related loss compensation has been developed and verified. This thesis also introduces a new paradigm for electrical generation and encoding of the SPAD array response that supports fully digital operation at the pixel level while enabling dynamic discrete time amplitude encoding of the array response. Thus offering a first ever system solution to simultaneously exploit both the dynamic nature and the digital profile of the SPAD response. The array interface, comprising of multiple digital inputs capacitively coupled onto a shared quasi-floating sense node, in conjunction with the integrated digital decoding and readout electronics represents the first ever solid state single-photon sensor capable of both photon counting and photon number resolution. The viability of the readout architecture is demonstrated through simulations and preliminary proof of concept measurements.
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    Neutron Detection by Noble Gas Excimer Scintillation
    (2013) Beasten, Amy Elizabeth; Al-Sheikhly, Mohamad; Nuclear Engineering; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
    The field of neutron detection has many essential applications, from nuclear reactor instrumentation, oil-well logging, radiation safety, and, in recent years, homeland security. Due to the shortage and increasing cost of the neutron absorber used in most conventional gas-filled proportional counters, there has been an increased motivation for the development of alternative methods of neutron detection that do not rely on 3He. Excimer-based neutron detection (END) is a potential alternative with many advantages, notably the lack of dependence on 3He. Similar to traditional proportional counters, END operates on the interaction of a neutron with a neutron absorbing nucleus (10B, 6Li, or 3He). The energetic charged particles produced in these reactions lose energy in the surrounding gas background and cause ionization and excitation of the noble gas molecules. The difference between END and traditional gas-filled detectors, which collect the ionized charge to produce a detectable signal, is the formation of noble gas excimers (Ar2*, Kr2*, or Xe2*). These excited dimers decay from an excited state back to ground level and emit far-ultraviolet (FUV) radiation in the form of photons which can be collected using a photomultiplier tube (PMT) or other photon detector. The most important advantage to these potential detectors is the fact that they do not rely on the use of 3He. The excimer scintillation yield from rare noble gases following the 10B neutron capture reaction in both 10B enriched BF3 gas and reticulated vitreous carbon foam (RVC) coated with a layer of B4C is the focus of this thesis. Experimental data were collected at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and on a recently established thermal neutron beamline at the Maryland University Training Reactor (MUTR). The comparison of these data to data from previous thin-film experiments provides the groundwork for the continuation of future END work using these materials, which will be used to develop and optimize a deployable neutron detector based on excimer emission.
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    CMOS SINGLE-PHOTON AVALANCHE DIODES AND MICROMACHINED OPTICAL FILTERS FOR INTEGRATED FLUORESCENCE SENSING
    (2012) Dandin, Marc Peralte; Abshire, Pamela A; Smela, Elisabeth; Bioengineering; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
    This dissertation presents a body of work that addresses the two most pressing challenges in the field of integrated fluorescence sensing, namely, the design of integrated optical sensors and the fabrication of high-rejection micro-scale optical filters. Two novel enabling technologies were introduced. They are: the perimeter-gated single-photon avalanche diode (PGSPAD), for on-chip photon counting, and the benzotriazole (BTA)-doped thin-film polymer filter, for on-chip ultraviolet light rejection. Experimental results revealed that the PGSPAD front-end, fabricated in a 0.5 μm standard mixed-signal CMOS process, had the capability of counting photons in the MHz regime. In addition, it was found that a perimeter gate, a structural feature used to suppress edge breakdown in the diode, also maximized the signal-to-noise-ratio in the high-count rate regime whereas it maximized sensitivity at low count rates. On the other hand, BTA-doped filters were demonstrated utilizing three commonly used polymers as hosts. The filters were patternable, utilizing the same procedures traditionally used to pattern the undoped polymer hosts, a key advantage for integration into microsystems. Filter performance was analyzed using a set of metrics developed for optoelectronic characterization of integrated fluorescence sensors; high rejection levels (nearing -40 dB) of UV light were observed in films of only 5 μm in thickness. Ultimately, BTA-doped filters were integrated into a portable sensor, and their use was demonstrated in two types of bioassays.