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A Brief Technical History of the Large-Area Picosecond Photodetector (LAPPD) Collaboration

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arxiv 1603.01843 v1 pith:47MNZ4NM submitted 2016-03-06 physics.ins-det hep-ex

A Brief Technical History of the Large-Area Picosecond Photodetector (LAPPD) Collaboration

classification physics.ins-det hep-ex
keywords collaborationlarge-arealappdresolutioncapabledevelopdevelopedlarge
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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The Large Area Picosecond PhotoDetector (LAPPD) Collaboration was formed in 2009 to develop large-area photodetectors capable of time resolutions measured in pico-seconds, with accompanying sub-millimeter spatial resolution. During the next three and one-half years the Collaboration developed the LAPPD design of 20 x 20 cm modules with gains greater than $10^7$ and non-uniformity less than $15\%$, time resolution less than 50 psec for single photons and spatial resolution of 700~microns in both lateral dimensions. We describe the R\&D performed to develop large-area micro-channel plate glass substrates, resistive and secondary-emitting coatings, large-area bialkali photocathodes, and RF-capable hermetic packaging. In addition, the Collaboration developed the necessary electronics for large systems capable of precise timing, built up from a custom low-power 15-GigaSample/sec waveform sampling 6-channel integrated circuit and supported by a two-level modular data acquisition system based on Field-Programmable Gate Arrays for local control, data-sparcification, and triggering. We discuss the formation, organization, and technical successes and short-comings of the Collaboration. The Collaboration ended in December 2012 with a transition from R\&D to commercialization.

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