1 Fluoride contamination of the RPC working gas and ageing phenomena in collaboration with Dip. Chimica University of Roma “Tor Vergata” Bio-Electro analytical.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Radiation Detection ionization chambers (dosimeters, pulse chambers, particle track chambers) scintillation detectors semiconductor detectors photographic.
Advertisements

Glass Resistive plate chambers for muon Detection
CHEM 213 Instrumental Analysis
ALPHA PNEUMATICS 11-Krishna Kutir, Madanlal Dhigra Road, Panch Pakhadi Thane , INDIA DECOMPOSITION OF SF 6 -R134a EFFLUENT.
1 Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy Atomic Emission Spectroscopy Lecture 18.
- Kinetic Theory of Mater - States of matter - Phase changes - Classes of Matter - Properties of Matter - Conservation of Mass.
427 PHC.  Atomic emission spectroscopy (AES) is based upon emission of electromagnetic radiation by atoms.
Aging, High Rate and Shielding L. Lopes Lip-Coimbra.
C.Gustavino, XPC and VETO, LNGS OPERA meeting, may VETO AND XPC: Preliminary ideas Outline: Mechanical structure Gas mixture study Aging tests Glass.
POLYMERISATION PROCESSES IN LOW-PRESSURE FLUOROCARBON PLASMAS
1 Boyle’s Law (T and n constant) Charles’ Law (p and n constant) Combined Gas Law (n constant) Summary of Gas Laws p 1 ×V 1 = p 2 ×V 2.
Atomic Emission - AES M* → M + hn Thermal excitation M → M*
Ionization. Measuring Ions A beam of charged particles will ionize gas. –Particle energy E –Chamber area A An applied field will cause ions and electrons.
1 Daya Bay Collaboration Meeting, IHEP, Beijing, 8/1-3/2007 RPC aging concern Changguo Lu Princeton University Daya Bay Collaboration Meeting IHEP, Beijing,
Lecture 1 INTRODUCTION TO INSTRUMENTAL ANALYSIS Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Lecture 11.0 Etching. Etching Patterned –Material Selectivity is Important!! Un-patterned.
Atomic Emission Spectroscopy
Chapter 8 Solutions, Acids & Bases
Solubility and Solutions. Water is the most abundant liquid on the earth and is necessary for all life. Because of water's great dissolving properties,
Decomposition of methanol in a low-pressure DC glow discharge in nitrogen-oxygen mixture Ayako Katsumata 1, Kohki Satoh 1,2 and Hidenori Itoh 1 1 Department.
LRT2004 Sudbury, December 2004Igor G. Irastorza, CEA Saclay NOSTOS: a spherical TPC to detect low energy neutrinos Igor G. Irastorza CEA/Saclay NOSTOS.
On aging problem of glass Resistive Plate Chambers India-based Neutrino Observatory (INO) collaboration JIGSAW.
Chapter 15 Preview Lesson Starter Objectives
1 A.Di Ciaccio LHC upgrade Working Group November 2005 The ATLAS RPC trigger system  The entire stand-alone muon system has been designed to handle background.
The dynamic behaviour of Resistive Plate Chambers
Quality Assurance How do you know your results are correct? How confident are you?
Optimization of the Resistive Plate Chamber operation with a closed loop gas system at the Large Hadron Collider experiments M. Capeans, I. Glushkov, R.
Chemistry Topic: Atomic theory Subtopic : Mass Spectrometer.
Chapter 11 – Intermolecular Forces, Liquids and Solids Homework: 13, 16, 18, 19, 23, 43, 45, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 54, 55, 56.
Study of UV absorption and photoelectron emission in RPC (Resistive Plate Counters) detector with an UV source Carlo Gustavino (INFN-LNGS) RPC and their.
Ionization Detectors Basic operation
Advanced Analytical Chemistry – CHM 6157® Y. CAIFlorida International University Updated on 9/26/2006Chapter 3ICPMS Interference equations Isobaric.
Atoms  Chemistry is the study of matter. 6.1 Atoms, Elements, and Compounds  Atoms are the building blocks of matter. Chapter 6 Chemistry in Biology.
RPCs of BESIII Muon Identifier  BESIII and muon identifier  R&D  Mass production  Installation Zhang Qingmin Advisor: Zhang Jiawen.
Andrea Di Simone Andrea Di Simone – INFN Roma2 Andrea Di Simone CERN PH/ATC and INFN-CNAF On behalf of ATLAS RPC groups: Lecce, Napoli, Protvino, Roma2.
Analytical Separations
Control of the RPC ageing effects in the ATLAS chambers at the GIF - X5 CERN irradiation facility Siena 2004 Siena, 24/05/2004 By G. Aielli on behalf of.
The Chemistry of Life. E. coli vs. E. coli Atoms Submicroscopic units of matter Smallest unit of all physical material.
Properties of Water. Objectives: 1.Why are water molecules polar? 2.What are acidic solutions? 3.What are basic solutions?
Properties of Water. A compound is a pure substance made up of atoms of two or more elements The proportion of atoms are always fixed Chemical formula.
Results from the CMS-RPC tests at CERN Gamma Irradiation Facility Roberto Guida CMS-RPC (Bari, Beijing, Napoli, Pavia, Sofia) Seoul, October 2005.
The Chemistry of Life Properties of Water. The Water Molecule Neutral Charge –All Molecules Are Neutral.
30 October 2003V.Souvorov / B.Schmidt - MWPC PRR CERN site1 MWPC Aging Studies Outline: Overview of aging tests done Results in terms of gain variations.
Study of gas mixture containing SF6 for the OPERA RPCs A.Paoloni, A. Mengucci (LNF)
1 Analysis of Small RPC DHCAL Prototype Data (noise and cosmic ray) LCWA09, Albuquerque, New Mexico Friday, October 02, 2009 Qingmin Zhang HEP Division,
Describe why hydrogen bonding in water is important Explain why water is such a good solvent (example: salt dissolving in water) Describe the difference.
Siena 2002 Siena, 24/10/2002 G. Passaleva New results from an extensive aging test on bakelite RPC G. Passaleva INFN Firenze.
Many mass spectra are observed in addition to those of nitrogen (28amu) and benzene (78amu) molecules between 1 and 80amu, when the discharge is not generated.
A WIRELESS PASSIVE SENSOR FOR TEMPERATURE COMPENSATED REMOTE PH MONITORING IEEE SENSORS JOURNAL VOLUME 13, NO.6, JUNE 2013 WEN-TSAI SUNG, YAO-CHI HSU Ching-Hong.
Physical Behavior of Matter Review. Matter is classified as a substance or a mixture of substances.
SiO x coated fiber optic sensor for gas monitoring in RPC S. Grassini 1, M. Parvis 2, M. Ishaiwi 2 1 Dip. di Scienza Applicata e Tecnologia 2 Dip. di Elettronica.
 What do you call the following phase changes?  Solid to a liquid  Melting  Liquid to a solid  freezing  Liquid to a gas  vaporization  Gas to.
RPCs with Ar-CO2 mix G. Aielli; R.Cardarelli; A. Zerbini For the ATLAS ROMA2 group.
CHAPTER 14: LIQUIDS AND SOLIDS.  Condensed State- substances in these states have much higher densities than they do in the gaseous state CONDENSED.
CHAPTER 17 – CHEMICAL EQUILIBRIUM 8B-1 (of 37) COLLISION THEORY 1 - Molecules must collide to react 2 -Molecules must collide with sufficient energy to.
HYDRO NANO GAS - AN ANSWER TO GREENHOUSE GASES presented by sai sujan piriya.
Water & Solutions Water is a unique molecule necessary for life –Found in all cells –Surrounds all cells.
Water: The solvent for Biochemical Reactions
Seok-geun Lee, Young-hwa An, Y.S. Hwang
Study on Surface Asperities
Chemistry Essential Standard
Fluoride contamination of the RPC working gas and ageing phenomena
R. Guida PH-DT-DI Boston Students Program CERN, 16/1/2013
SPS1. Obtain, evaluate, and communicate information from the Periodic Table to explain the relative properties of elements based on patterns of atomic.
7th Grade Acids and Bases Review
DECOMPOSITION PROCESS OF BENZENE IN A LOW PRESSURE GLOW DISCHARGE
Calculating Acidity.
Knowledge Organiser – Chemical Changes
Calculating Acidity.
Resistive Plate Chambers performance with Cosmic Rays
Presentation transcript:

1 Fluoride contamination of the RPC working gas and ageing phenomena in collaboration with Dip. Chimica University of Roma “Tor Vergata” Bio-Electro analytical group (BEAT) RPC 2005 Seoul – 12 october 2005 Giulio Aielli

2 Introduction  The RPCs make large use of electronegative gases to control and limit the discharge process. F compound gases such as C 2 H 2 F 4 and SF 6 were introduced for their effectiveness and industrial common use.  The decomposition of such a gases under electrical discharge produces a significant concentration of fluoride radicals that can be detected in the RPC exhausted gas.  The F radicals may easyly produce HF. Due to its high chemical reactivity, this represents a possible cause of the inner surface damaging if it is not quickly removed by the gas flow. HF film on inner bakelite surface increases ohmic current. HF is an aggressive acid: it can harm the inner surface finding the eventual weak points of the oil protective coating. The effect is self sustaining HF damage  rate increase  more HF  Systematic measurements of this process can help to understand many ageing processes and can be also a new probe to investigate the discharge phenomena

3 Measurement setup TISAB + H2O fluoride probe DAQ pH meter Gas system Gas T,RH probe RPC current SCALER: Singles doubles Magnetic stirrer Gas in Gas out (teflon) To exit bubbler Teflon container F ˙ was measured by an Ion selective electrode probe(0.02 ppm F ˙ sensitivity), read by a PHmeter (used as impedance converter and prompt monitor) and recorded by DAQ Serial line  The F- can be measured by trapping the ions e.g. by bubbling the gas in water where the fluorine is detectable as Fluoride.  The TISAB (Total Ionic Strength Adjousting Buffer) neutralizes the effect of the electrode interfering substances such as OH- or metal traces. It keeps the PH around 5.5

4 ROMA2 SETUPBABAR SETUP Now doubled both

5 Measurement strategies continuous cumulative measurements in TISAB + H 2 O buffer Study of the F ˙ pollutant dynamicsUnderstand and control systematics To avoid external electrode interferences Short current pulse stimulation: Tpulse << gas change rate Determine the absolute total F produced per given charge and conditions Ageing (long term) studies Study the F attachment (RPC as a pulse attenuator) Step response (long sample accumulation) Production rate dependence from the working conditions (measurement in a stationary state) F accumulated in long term runs Deep extraction cycles with Ar plasma Study of the F “weak” attachment

6 Typical run in continuous mode  Linear fit of the slope  Sudden change of the working point  Calibration constants  Instantaneous F ˙ readout  Instantaneous F ˙ rate readout

7 F vs. Isobutane (Binary mix in streamer mode)  Measurement at fixed current (15.5 A) and counting rate on 2 different chambers  Lower rate (40 Hz/cm 2 )  The effect of Iso-butane: The 15%/3% ratio is 4.99 on an aged chamber: a factor 5 of iso-butane reduces by5 the F˙ The 20%/5% ratio is 2.9 for the second chamber: a factor 4 in iso-butane reduces the F˙ by a factor of 3  The iso-butane F ˙ suppression mechanism seems to be more effective in streamer than in avalanche. (IEEE2004)

8 F- vs I production law and exception… Avalanche mode: F- depends linearly on current only Saturation at higher currents (av. or stream.) for SF6 free mix Deviated from the “standard low”: Streamer contamination And 0.5% SF6 Measurement Performed on the same chamber but over about 1 month with very different env. conditions Why saturation? Recombination Mechanism of F?

9 F- entrapment in the RPC & Flow Rate  Evaluation of the F- entrapment In first approx. It depends from the flow To estimate it one chamber is alternatively used as a filter following… The difference is measured  The “real” production rate can be guessed by applying the absorbed fraction as a correction (A) HV on (B) HV off

10 F- entrapment in the RPC & Flow Rate  Fixed rate & current (10 uA)  Variable flow  Binary mixture 10% I-butane  OLD and very used chamber  By applying the measured entrapped fraction to the first chamber we guess the total effective F- produced that is more or less constant and flow independent  To be verified: the attachment of a passive chamber may be different when turned on… (Argon suggestion…)  What if the chamber was new?

11 Pulsed measurements of F- (moles) 2’:30’’ flow=60cc/min+ 2’:30’’ flow=0 300’’ flow=0300’’ flow=60 cc/min uninterrupted

12 F- entrapment: pulse test  New chamber 10x10 cm^2  10%Ibutane binary mix  300 pulse: 3mC= 1.9E16 electrons  Pulse given with gas closed  60 cc/min flow for the tail with the chamber off (4h)  60 cc/min Ar+10A for forced extraction (5 days)  Final value about 6 moles= 3.6E18 molecules  Prompt signal 0.25 moles  Released energy: V*I*T=30J= 18.7E19 eV For each electron we have ~ 50 F radicals. Primary Ionization potential of TFE is 13.6 and 17.4 To free each F radical we have ~ 100 eV available. C-F dissociation energy in TFE is 4.5 eV The numbers are compatible

13 Time evolution: a simple model for the HV=0 extraction-deposition  F’ gas = -1/V F’ dep –/V F gas variation of fraction fraction flowed F in the gas evaporated away  F’ dep = JF gas – K F sup) variation of proportional to the F deposited respective fractions The solution for F gas is like: C1e1t + C2e2t The measurement is the integral of Fgas and can be fitted as in the plot The process constants can be studied for different conditions

14 Time evolution: Argon forced extraction The experimental curve is simply Ftot(t)=A(1-e -t ) The plot fits 1-Ftot(t)/A (A=6.4 moles) The extraction rate is linear with The current in Argon at a given time The tau of the process is of the Order of 2 days. The measurement was repeated showing the same tau within 10% This number should depend on the current/surface ratio. This is obtained cleaning an old 20x20 aged RPC tau~ 8.4 days

15 Fluoride measurements conclusions I.A relevant fluorine production rate has been measured in the RPC gas II.The concentration of i-C4H10 in C2H2F4 based gas mixtures seems to be essential for keeping the Fluorine production rate at low level III.A significant fraction of the fluorine tends to accumulate in the chamber walls and can not be removed only by flushing many fresh gas volumes. The lost fraction depends on the gas flow rate. IV.The F- effective production rate seems independent from the flow V.The F- production low is current-only dependent for SF6 free mixtures, no matter of the w.p. and operative mode. VI.A large saturation effect is visible at high current. Still under study. VII.The SF6 seems to take a relevant part in the SF6 production but it does not follow the production law in streamer mode (does not saturate). Hints for streamer models? VIII.The pulsed F test has been introduced to study in detail the production balance and the attachment. IX.Two type of attachment are identified: ionic bound and molecular bound, being the last dominant for a chamber which is new. The molecular bound can be broken by means of Argon plasma operation X.Two simple models for the F deposition/extraction are introduced and seems to explain the process dynamic. XI.….Some answers but many new questions….