Low-energy X-ray detection with an in-vacuum PILATUS detector

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Abstract

The feasibility of using PILATUS single-X-ray-photon counting detectors for long-wavelength macromolecular crystallography was investigated by carrying out a series of experiments at Diamond Light Source. A water-cooled PILATUS 100k detector was tested in vacuum with monochromatic 3 keV X-rays on the Diamond test beamline B16. Effects of detector cooling on noise performance, energy calibration and threshold trimming were investigated. When detecting 3 keV X-rays, the electronic noise of the analogue output of pixel preamplifiers forces the threshold to be set at a higher level than the 50% energy level recommended to minimize charge-sharing effects. The influence of threshold settings at low X-ray energy was studied by characterizing the detector response to a collimated beam of 3 keV X-rays scanned across several pixels. The relationship between maximum count rate and minimum energy threshold was investigated separately for various detector gain settings. © 2011 IOP Publishing Ltd and SISSA.

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APA

Marchal, J., Luethi, B., Ursachi, C., Mykhaylyk, V., & Wagner, A. (2011). Low-energy X-ray detection with an in-vacuum PILATUS detector. Journal of Instrumentation, 6(11). https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-0221/6/11/C11033

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