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V. Radicci

Researcher at Paul Scherrer Institute

Publications -  40
Citations -  692

V. Radicci is an academic researcher from Paul Scherrer Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Detector & Photon counting. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 40 publications receiving 643 citations. Previous affiliations of V. Radicci include European Synchrotron Radiation Facility.

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Developments for radiation hard silicon detectors by defect engineering—results by the CERN RD48 (ROSE) Collaboration

G. Lindström, +140 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors summarized the final results obtained by the RD48 collaboration, focusing on the more practical aspects directly relevant for LHC applications, including the changes of the effective doping concentration (depletion voltage) and the dependence of radiation effects on fluence, temperature and operational time.
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Radiation-hard semiconductor detectors for SuperLHC

Mara Bruzzi, +284 more
TL;DR: The latest advancements within the RD50 collaboration on radiation hard semiconductor detectors are reviewed and discussed in this work as mentioned in this paper, which includes the development of new or defect engineered detector materials (SiC, GaN, Czochralski and epitaxial silicon), the improvement of present detector designs and the understanding of the microscopic defects causing the degradation of the irradiated detectors.
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Development of radiation tolerant semiconductor detectors for the Super-LHC.

Michael Moll, +250 more
TL;DR: The CERN RD50 collaboration as mentioned in this paper is working on the development of semiconductor sensors matching the requirements of the SLHC experiments, which includes 3D, Semi-3D and thin detectors.
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Recent advancements in the development of radiation hard semiconductor detectors for S-LHC

Eckhart Fretwurst, +251 more
TL;DR: The CERN RD50 collaboration as discussed by the authors is an R&D program for the development of detector technologies that will fulfill the requirements of the Large Hadron Collider (S-LHC) at CERN.