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Lecture 3-Building a Detector (cont’d) George K. Parks Space Sciences Laboratory UC Berkeley, Berkeley, CA.

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Presentation on theme: "Lecture 3-Building a Detector (cont’d) George K. Parks Space Sciences Laboratory UC Berkeley, Berkeley, CA."— Presentation transcript:

1 Lecture 3-Building a Detector (cont’d) George K. Parks Space Sciences Laboratory UC Berkeley, Berkeley, CA

2 Summary of Lecture 1 and 2

3 Photocathode

4 Photoelectron Emission Process

5 Photocathodes vs Spectral Emission of scintillators

6 Transmittance of window material of PMT

7 Dark Current <1 photo-e - 2 photo-e - 1 photo-e -

8 Dark current (cont’d)

9 Temperature Characteristics of Dark Current

10 Linearity Non-Linearity starts when anode current exceeds 10 -5 A.

11 Spatial Uniformity

12 Magnetic field effects Magnetic field deflects electrons in PMT. To reduce magnetic effect, shield PMT with  -metal. Why peak not at 0? Unit (magnetic field mT)

13 Incident photons and PMT output

14 Pulse Height Distribution (Energy Spectra) ~5.9 keV ~ 662 keV

15 Energy Resolution E dN/dE

16 Energy Resolution for Scintillation Detector

17 Quantum Efficiency (Bi-Alkali)

18 Summary (Scintillation + PMT)

19 High energy charged particles

20 Comparison NaI(Tl) vs Ge(Li) Pulse height Spectrum of Ag

21 Band Model

22 Solid state detectors

23 Solid State Detectors (cont’d)

24 Operation of semiconductor detector

25 Calibration of Detectors The amount of energy required to produce electron-ion pair in Si detectors is 3.5 eV. Hence, if we know how many electron-ion pairs are produced, we obtain the energy of the particle. Detectors are biased so electrons and ions are collected separately at anode and cathode. A detector is calibrated with known beam energies. The size of the pulse measured is directly related to the original particle energy. The distribution of pulse-height vs energy gives the differential energy spectrum

26 Detector resolution vs energy

27 Energy Resolution of Semiconductor Detectors MaterialZ  BandgapIon E (e-h)Energy Resolution Si (77 o K)142.331.12 eV3.61 eV400 eV @ 60 keV (77K)1.163.76550 eV @ 122 keV Ge(77K)325.330.722.98400 eV @ 122 keV (0.35%) 900 eV @ 662 keV 1300 eV @ 1332 keV CdTe(300K) ~506.061.524.431.7 keV @ 60 keV 3.5 keV @ 122 keV (2.8%) HgI 2 (300K)6.42.134.33.2 keV@122 keV (2.6%) 5.96 keV@662 keV

28

29 Early design of quadrispheric analyzer ESA designs include cylindrical, spherical and quadrispherical shaped plates. ESAs are basically capacitors with voltage applied across the plates. + and – charges are deflected in opposite directions. Advantages of curved plates include reducing HV (analyzer constant) and UV rejection Once E/q selected, particle is recorded by an electron detector CEM).

30 Low Energy Proton and Electron Differential Energy Analyzer (LEPEDEA)

31 Degradation and Noise

32 MicroChannel Plates (MCP)

33 Operation of MCP (schematic)

34 Degradation of MCPs

35 BURLE, Long-life MCP test

36 Background counts in detectors

37 A scintillation detector Incident photon h stops in scintillator, generates scintillation photons. Scintillation photons propagate to photocathode and produce photoelectrons Photoelectrons multiplied at subsequent dynodes and collected at the anode Measured current from Anode to ground directly proportional to photoelectron flux generated at photocathode

38 Schematic diagram of a working Balloon-borne X-ray Detector

39 Summary Discussed briefly how to build detectors to measure Photons and Charged Particles Basic principle is relatively simple. There are only a few components for particle and photon detection. However, there are many details that can affect the measurements. Innovative ways to use these components to design one of a kind instrument to enhance science goals. SSTs can be used to detect Energetic Neutral Atoms (ENA). ESA + TOF + MCP can be used to determine M/q. Pin hole, coded aperture, modulation collimators yield 2D information. Stereoscopic view (2 SC) can yield 3D information.

40 Optimization

41 Particle measurements (Reminder)

42 Issues to consider in instrument design - Energy resolutions: More science with high energy resolution. - Detector efficiency: Maintain as high as possible. - Pulse height defect: Difference between true and apparent energy - Channeling: effect of crystal orientation - Dead layer: low energy threshold - Radiation damage: degrades energy resolution and counting efficiency - UV rejection (MCPs): spurious counts contamination - Pulse pile up: Loss of true counts. - Leakage current: - Detector Noise: - Changes with bias voltage: Effect if bias voltage is low - Temperature sensitivity: loss of detector performance - Cleanliness: produce noise in system. - Micro-acoustic sensitivity:

43 The End

44 Temperature Characteristics of Photocathodes Temperature change is large near the long wavelength cutoff. Unit is in % / o C

45 Life Characteristics Damage from the last dynode due to heavy electron bombardment

46 Summary of PMT Quantum efficiency Collection efficiency Window material Photocathode material Gain Dark Current Spatial Uniformity Temperature Charactristics Magnetic field effect Life characteristics Electronic noise Dynamic range Linearity Time response Decide photon counting or measure current How to select photocathode material (eg, S-13, etc..) Less than single photon spectrum; single and two photon spectra. Important for single photon counting. Determine HV for operation (900, 1100, 1200, etc..) Determine quantum efficiency of photocathode

47 Channel Electron Multipliers ESAs usually combine with CEMs or MCPs. Straight tubes produce large ion feedback current. Ion feedback can be reduced by curving the channeltrons Evans (1965)


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