Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

FLUKA Rechnungen für das CBM Experiment an FAIR

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "FLUKA Rechnungen für das CBM Experiment an FAIR"— Presentation transcript:

1 FLUKA Rechnungen für das CBM Experiment an FAIR
Anna Senger CBM Detektoren

2 Outlook FLUKA tool and radiation environment predictions
The CBM experiment FLUKA calculations for the CBM detector development Conclusions FLUKA "The FLUKA code: Description and benchmarking" G. Battistoni, S. Muraro, P.R. Sala, F. Cerutti, A. Ferrari, S. Roesler, A. Fasso`, J. Ranft, Proceedings of the Hadronic Shower Simulation Workshop 2006, Fermilab 6--8 September 2006, M. Albrow, R. Raja eds., AIP Conference Proceeding 896, 31-49, (2007) "FLUKA: a multi-particle transport code" A. Fasso`, A. Ferrari, J. Ranft, and P.R. Sala, CERN (2005), INFN/TC_05/11, SLAC-R-773 FLAIR V.Vlachoudis "FLAIR: A Powerful But User Friendly Graphical Interface For FLUKA“ Proc. Int. Conf. on Mathematics, Computational Methods & Reactor Physics (M&C 2009), Saratoga Springs, New York, 2009

3 FLUKA FLUKA is a general purpose tool for calculations of particle transport and interactions with matter, covering an extended range of applications spanning from proton and electron accelerator shielding to target design, calorimetry, activation, dosimetry, detector design, Accelerator Driven Systems, cosmic rays, neutrino physics, radiotherapy etc. Transport limits: Secondary particles Primary particles charged hadrons keV-20 TeV * keV-20 TeV * ** neutrons thermal-20 TeV * thermal-20 TeV * antineutrons keV-20 TeV * MeV-20 TeV * muons keV-1000 TeV keV-1000 TeV ** electrons keV-1000 TeV keV-1000 TeV (low-Z materials) ** 150 keV-1000 TeV (high-Z materials) ** photons eV-1000 TeV keV TeV heavy ions <10000 TeV/n <10000 TeV/n * upper limit 10 PeV with the DPMJET interface ** lower limit 10 keV in single scattering mode thermal ~ 10-5 eV

4 MATERIAL CAUSE RADIATION EFFECT
Radiation Effects MATERIAL CAUSE RADIATION EFFECT Semiconductors Electron-hole pair dose ionization Photon interaction photon absorption Lattice displacement nuclear collision Polymers Main and side chain rupture dose ionization cross-linking degradation dose ionization gas evolution, radical production dose rate Ceramics Lattice displacements nuclear collision trapped charge carriers dose ionization color centers dose ionization Metals Lattice displacements nuclear collision nuclear reactions producing clusters nuclear collision voids and bubbles nuclear collision

5 Radiation environment during the experiments
Dose in shielded areas (where the electronics is usually located) is mainly due to neutrons (and associated photons) Dose and neutron fluxes have a very close correlation Cumulative damage comes from Energy deposition (ionizing dose) Lattice displacement (1-MeV n equivalent particle fluxes) Stochastic failures can occur (SEU) and are mostly due to “high” energy hadrons (“E>20 MeV”) No safe limit exists, only a risk level can be determined Risk level for commercial electronics is poorly known and varies by orders of magnitude between different devices and series Only a combination of the following can assure safe operation: Simulation studies of related radiation levels (Dose, 1MeV, 20MeV) Careful selection and testing of required electronics Shielding and displacement considerations

6 Radiation Effects microscopic effect (detectors)
Displacement Damage. Hadrons can interact and cause significant damage to the crystal lattice. The amount and type of damage depends on the particle type and energy. The damage is usually quantified by the amount of Non-Ionizing Energy Loss Ionizing Radiation is of high energy, capable to penetrate in the matter, to produce ionization of the atoms and to break chemical bonds. macroscopic effect (electronics)

7 CBM experiment @ FAIR STS MuCh TRD ToF PSD MVD + STS RICH TRD ToF ECAL
Experimental tasks and detector systems tracking, momentum determination, vertex reconstruction: silicon pixel/strip detectors (MVD+STS) in a magnetic dipole field hadron identification: Time-of-Flight (ToF) measurements lepton identification: Muon detection system, RICH, TRD and ECAL for electrons (alternative measurements) determination of collision centrality and event plane: projectile spectator detector (PSD) high speed DAQ and online event selection STS MuCh TRD ToF PSD MVD + STS RICH TRD ToF ECAL PSD Experimental and technical challenges high multiplicities (up to 1000 particles per reaction) high reaction rates (up to 10 MHz)

8 FLUKA CBM geometry CBM @ SIS300 full setup CBM @ SIS100 start version
side view TRD ToF SIS300 full setup vacuum beam pipe MVD + STS PSD RICH FLAIR side view SIS100 start version ToF TRD MVD + STS PSD He bags RICH FLAIR

9 CAVE Non-Ionizing Energy Loss (NIEL) CBM @ SIS300 CBM @ SIS100 vacuum
SIS100: 10 GeV/u, 109 Au/s SIS300: 35 GeV/u, 109 Au/s Non-Ionizing Energy Loss (NIEL) neq/cm2/2months side view vacuum beam pipe SIS300 side view SIS100 He bags

10 CAVE Ionizing dose CBM @ SIS300 CBM @ SIS100 vacuum beam pipe He bags
SIS100: 10 GeV/u, 109 Au/s SIS300: 35 GeV/u, 109 Au/s Ionizing dose Gy/2months side view vacuum beam pipe SIS300 side view SIS100 He bags

11 MVD Ionizing dose CBM @ SIS300 CBM @ SIS100 5 cm 10 cm 15 cm
SIS100: 10 GeV/u, 107 Au/s SIS300: 35 GeV/u, 107 Au/s Ionizing dose 5 cm 10 cm 15 cm Gy/2months SIS300  10 cm  18.6 cm  22.8 cm SIS100

12 MVD Non-Ionizing Energy Loss (NIEL) CBM @ SIS300 CBM @ SIS100 5 cm
SIS100: 10 GeV/u, 107 Au/s SIS300: 35 GeV/u, 107 Au/s Non-Ionizing Energy Loss (NIEL) 5 cm 10 cm 15 cm neq/cm2/2months SIS300  10 cm  18.6 cm  22.8 cm SIS100

13 STS Ionizing dose CBM @ SIS300 CBM @ SIS100 30 cm 100 cm
SIS100: 10 GeV/u, 107 Au/s SIS300: 35 GeV/u, 107 Au/s Ionizing dose 30 cm 100 cm Gy/2months SIS300 48  40 cm2 96  100 cm2 SIS100 electronics

14 STS Non-Ionizing Energy Loss (NIEL) CBM @ SIS300 CBM @ SIS100 30 cm
SIS100: 10 GeV/u, 107 Au/s SIS300: 35 GeV/u, 107 Au/s Non-Ionizing Energy Loss (NIEL) 30 cm 100 cm neq/cm2/2months SIS300 48  40 cm2 96  100 cm2 SIS100 electronics

15 Detector damages 1014 n/cm2 104 Gy

16 live time without/mild damages
Conclusions estimated CBM detector live time (only for hot regions) detectors beam intensity (s-1) live time without/mild damages MVD 107 6 months * STS 109 10 months * RICH 2 years ** MuCh 6 months ** TRD ToF PSD 108 1 year ** * sensitive to the NIEL ** sensitive to the ionizing dose


Download ppt "FLUKA Rechnungen für das CBM Experiment an FAIR"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google