Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Working Group 1 Technological Aspects and Developments of New Detector structures WG1 Geometry and Interactions.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Working Group 1 Technological Aspects and Developments of New Detector structures WG1 Geometry and Interactions."— Presentation transcript:

1 Working Group 1 Technological Aspects and Developments of New Detector structures WG1 Geometry and Interactions

2 WG1: Technological Aspects and Developments of New Detector Structures Objective: Detector design optimization, development of new multiplier geometries and techniques. Task 1: Development of large-area Micro-Pattern Gas Detectors (large-area modules, material budget reduction). Task 2: Detector design optimization including fabrication methods and new geometries (Bulk Micromegas, Microbulk Micromegas, single-mask GEM, THGEM, RETGEM, MHSP, charge-dispersive readout, Ingrid). Task 3: Development of radiation-hard and radio-purity detectors. Task 4: Design of portable sealed detectors.

3 How will we work? Obviously, the work has to start from the Applications. There will be meetings on the various tasks to compare findings, exchange experience from the applications Example : Thick-GEMS are developed for various applications: photon detection for Cherenkov, calorimetry, muon systems… RD51’s goal is to make these work together. Another example : large bulk Micromegas are developed for sLHC muon chambers, neutrino long baseline experiments, calorimetry. Here also cross-fertilization between applications would be productive. The first step was to ask, end of May 2008: - What is your preferred technology?(GEM, Micromegas, THGEM, RETGEM, MHSP, Cobra, PIMS, Microgroove, microwell, microdots…) - What are your main applications? (calorimetry, TPC, photon detection, medical, imaging,… - What is your timescale (small prototyping, scale 1 prototyping, delivery of detector, …) GEOMETRY OF WG1

4 Geometry of WG1 38 institutes out of 54 expressed interest in tasks of Working Group 1 28 on Large Area Detectors (task 1) 9 on Design optimization (task 2, strong overlap with WG2) 20 on Radiation hard and high radiopurity (task 3) 3 on sealed detectors (task 4, recently added) Large area detectors in various technologies are studied for various applications : SLHC muon chambers (tracking and triggering) SLHC forward tracking ILC-TPC Cherenkov counters neutrino long baseline experiments

5 Read-out board Laminated Photo-image- able cover lay frame Stretched mesh on frame Laminated Photo- image-able cover lay Raw material Single side copper patterning Polyimide etching Copper reduction Development of large-area Micro-Pattern Gas Detectors Bulk Micromegas Single mask GEM

6 Development of large-area Micro-Pattern Gas Detectors (as of September 22) Bulk Micromegas Single mask GEM

7 Development of resistive anodes

8 Task/Milestone Reference Participatin g Institutes DescriptionDeliverable Nature Start/Deliver y Date WG1-1/Development of large-area Micro-Pattern Gas Detectors - Micromegas CEA Saclay, Demokritos, Napoli, Bari, Athens Tech. U., Athens U., Lanzhou, Geneva, PNPI, Thessaloniki, Ottawa/Carlet on Development of large area Micromegas with segmented mesh and resistive anodes First prototype (1x0.5m 2 ) m1/m12 SLHC full sizem13/m60 CEA Saclay, Ottawa/Carlet on Demokritos, Athens Tech. U., Athens U. ILC full sizem13/m36 WG1-1/Development of large-area Micro-Pattern Gas Detectors - GEM Bari, CERN, Pisa-Siena, Roma, Arlington, Melbourne, TERA, PNPI, MPI Munich, Argonne GEM R&DReport, small size prototypes m1/m18 Bari, CERN, Pisa-Siena Full scale prototype m6/m18 Development completed m19/m30 Arlington Medium-size prototype m1/m6 1 m 2 prototypem13/m18 1 m 3 stackm19/m30 Roma, Bari JLab HallA full scale prototype m18/m30 Task & Milestones: Development of large- area Micro-Pattern Gas Detectors (large-area modules, material budget reduction).

9 200  m MESHES Electroformed Chemically etched Wowen PILLARS Deposited by vaporization Laser etching, Plasma etching… Many different technologies have been developped for making meshes (Back-buymers, CERN, 3M-Purdue, Gantois, Twente…) Exist in many metals: nickel, copper, stainless steel, Al,… also gold, titanium, nanocristalline copper are possible. Can be on the mesh (chemical etching) or on the anode (PCB technique with a photoimageable coverlay). Diameter 40 to 400 microns. Also fishing lines were used (Saclay, Lanzhou)

10 drilling + chemical rim etching without mask Mask etching + drilling; rim = 0.1mm Detector design optimization, fabrication methods and new geometries 6 keV X-ray 10 4 pitch = 1 mm; diameter = 0.5 mm; rim=40; 60; 80; 100; 120 mm THGEM Example

11 RTGEM: resistive electrode THGEM 3÷10 G  / copper oxide layer Gain of RETGEM in various gases: resistive foil glue pads PCB mesh Resistive anode: Charge dispersion readout 1 M  / plastic foil Discharge studies and spark-protection developments for MPGDs

12 Applications : ILC-TPC, DM, SLHC vertex detector, polarimetry in Astrophysics… Techniques: GEM, Micromegas Gas + Pixel detectors 55  m 14111  m 16120  m 14080  m (pixel array) 11 2233 44 55 55 μ m μ m Preamp/shap er TH L dis c. Configuration latches Interface Counter Synchronizat ion Logic TimePix 65000 pixels per chip Counting, time, time over threshold modes adressable pixel by pixel.

13 TimePix + Micromegas InGrid: grid deposition by post-processing on the chip Ultimate resolution: charged tracks and X-rays are reconstructed e- by e-

14 TimePix + Micromegas Electron counting in X rays and Fano factor direct measurement. Déliverable EUDET par Saclay: endplate 8-chips

15 Interactions of WG1 WG2 WG1 Production Electronics Test beams Characterization, basic studies on performance, aging Simulations New materials, new geometries Protection


Download ppt "Working Group 1 Technological Aspects and Developments of New Detector structures WG1 Geometry and Interactions."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google