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Overview of the ALICE ITS3 Upgrade

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Announce Type: new Abstract: The ALICE experiment will replace its three innermost tracking layers with the Inner Tracking System 3 (ITS3) during LHC Long Shutdown 3. This upgrade introduces the first fully cylindrical, wafer-scale silicon vertex detector, utilising Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors (MAPS) fabricated in a 65nm CMOS process. By thinning sensors to 50$\mu$m and bending them to radii as small as 19mm, the design achieves a self-supporting structure that eliminates traditional...

arXiv:2606.08042v1 Announce Type: new Abstract: The ALICE experiment will replace its three innermost tracking layers with the Inner Tracking System 3 (ITS3) during LHC Long Shutdown 3. This upgrade introduces the first fully cylindrical, wafer-scale silicon vertex detector, utilising Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors (MAPS) fabricated in a 65nm CMOS process. By thinning sensors to 50$\mu$m and bending them to radii as small as 19mm, the design achieves a self-supporting structure that eliminates traditional support material. Wafer-scale stitching enables 27cm-long seamless sensors with integrated power and signal distribution, removing the need for flexible printed circuits within the active volume. These innovations, combined with a move from water to air cooling, reduce the material budget to less than 0.09%X$_0$ per layer. The R&D program has been validated through full-scale prototypes (MOSS, MOST), which demonstrated stitching feasibility, high yield, and radiation hardness. Engineering models confirmed the feasibility of air-convection cooling, indicating effective thermal management and structural stability. This contribution summarises the key advances in stitched sensor development, mechanical integration, and the path toward the final qualification model.
ALICE (PERSON) the Inner Tracking System 3 (ORG) Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors (ORG) CMOS (ORG) MOSS (ORG)
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