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Astrophysics Detector Workshop – Nice – November 18 th, 20081 David Attié — on behalf of the LC-TPC Collaboration — Beam test of the.

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Presentation on theme: "Astrophysics Detector Workshop – Nice – November 18 th, 20081 David Attié — on behalf of the LC-TPC Collaboration — Beam test of the."— Presentation transcript:

1 David.Attie@cea.fr Astrophysics Detector Workshop – Nice – November 18 th, 20081 David Attié — on behalf of the LC-TPC Collaboration — Beam test of the Micromegas ILC-TPC Large Prototype MPGD2009 – Kolimpari, Crete - June 12-15, 2009

2 Outline David.Attie@cea.fr MPGD2009 – Crete – June 13 th, 2009 2 Introduction, technological choice for ILC-TPC The ILC-TPC Large Prototype Bulk Micromegas with resistive anodes Beam test conditions, T2K electronics Data analysis results –drift velocity –pad response function –resolution Comparison between two resistive modules Conclusion

3 How to improve the spatial resolution? David.Attie@cea.fr 3 Need for ILC: measure 200 track points with a transverse resolution ~ 100 μm - example of track separation with 1 mm x 6 mm pad size:  1,2 × 10 6 channels of electronics   z=0 > 250 μm amplification avalanche over one pad Spatial resolution σ xy : - limited by the pad size (  0 ~ width/√12) - charge distribution narrow (RMS avalanche ~ 15 μm)  1. Decrease the pad size: narrowed strips, pixels + single electron efficiency –need to identify the electron clusters  2. Spread charge over several pads: resistive anode + reduce number of channels, cost and budget + protect the electronics –limit the track separation –need offline computing –time resolution is affected 2. Resistive anode Calculation for the ILC-TPC D.C. Arogancia et al., NIMA 602 (2009) 403 55  m 1. Pixels MPGD2009 – Crete – June 13 th, 2009

4 ILC-TPC Large Prototype David.Attie@cea.fr 4 Built by the collaboration Financed by EUDET Located at DESY: 6 GeV e- beam Sharing out : - magnet : KEK, Japan - field cage : DESY, Germany - trigger : Saclay, France - endplate : Cornell, USA - Micromegas : Saclay, France, Carleton/Montreal, Canada - GEM : Saga, Japan - TimePix pixel : F, D, NLc MPGD2009 – Crete – June 13 th, 2009

5 ILC-TPC Large Prototype David.Attie@cea.fr 5 MPGD2009 – Crete – June 13 th, 2009

6 ILC-TPC Large Prototype David.Attie@cea.fr 6 60 cm long TPC Endplate ø = 80 cm of 7 interchangeable panels of 23 cm: –Micromegas –GEMs (See Takeshi Mastuda’s talk) –Pixels: TimePix + GEM or Micromegas 80 cm 24 rows x 72 columns ~ 3x7 mm 2 MPGD2009 – Crete – June 13 th, 2009

7 Three panels were successively mounted and tested in the Large Prototype and 1T magnet: -standard anode -resistive anode (carbon loaded kapton) with a resistivity ~ 4-8 MΩ/□ -resistive ink (~1-2 MΩ/□) Bulk Micromegas panels tested at DESY David.Attie@cea.fr 7 Standard bulk Micromegas module Carbon loaded kapton Micromegas module MPGD2009 – Crete – June 13 th, 2009 May-June 2009 November 2008

8 Beam test conditions at B=1T David.Attie@cea.fr 8 Bulk Micromegas detector: 1726 (24x72) pads of ~3x7 mm² AFTER-based electronics (72 channels/chip): –low-noise (700 e-) pre-amplifier-shaper –100 ns to 2 μs tunable peaking time –full wave sampling by SCA Beam data (5 GeV electrons) were taken at several z values by sliding the TPC in the magnet. Beam size was 4 mm rms. –frequency tunable from 1 to 100 MHz (most data at 25 MHz) –12 bit ADC (rms pedestals 4 to 6 channels) MPGD2009 – Crete – June 13 th, 2009

9 Determination of z range David.Attie@cea.fr 9 MPGD2009 – Crete – June 13 th, 2009 cosmic run at 25 MHz of sampling frequency  time bin = 40 ns TPC length = 56.7 cm agreement with survey 190 time bins

10 Pad signals: beam data sample David.Attie@cea.fr 10 RUN 284 B = 1T T2K gas Peaking time: 100 ns Frequency: 25 MHz MPGD2009 – Crete – June 13 th, 2009

11 Two-track separation David.Attie@cea.fr 11 MPGD2009 – Crete – June 13 th, 2009 r φ z

12 Offset per row David.Attie@cea.fr 12  rms offset ~9 microns MPGD2009 – Crete – June 13 th, 2009 B = 0T

13 Drift velocity measurement David.Attie@cea.fr 13 Measured drift velocity (E drift = 230 V/cm, 1002 mbar): 7.56 ± 0.02 cm/ μ s Magboltz: 7.548 ± 0.003 for Ar/CF 4 /iso-C 4 H 10 /H 2 O (95:3:2:100ppm) B = 0T MPGD2009 – Crete – June 13 th, 2009

14 Drift velocity vs. peaking time David.Attie@cea.fr 14  E drift = 230 V/cm  V d Magboltz = 76 μm/ns B=1T data For several peaking time settings: 200 ns, 500 ns, 1 μ s, 2 μs  E drift = 140 V/cm  V d Magboltz = 59 μm/ns Z (cm) Time bins MPGD2009 – Crete – June 13 th, 2009

15 Determination of the Pad Response Function David.Attie@cea.fr 15 Fraction of the row charge on a pad vs x pad – x track (normalized to central pad charge)  Clearly shows charge spreading over 2-3 pads (data with 500 ns shaping) Then fit x(cluster) using this shape with a χ² fit, and fit simultaneously all lines x pad – x track (mm)  Pad pitch  MPGD2009 – Crete – June 13 th, 2009 See Madhu Dixit’s talk x pad – x track (mm)

16 Residuals (z=25 cm) David.Attie@cea.fr 16 Residuals (x row -x track ) are gaussians row 1row 2row 3 row 4 row 5row 6 MPGD2009 – Crete – June 13 th, 2009

17 Residual bias (z=25 cm) David.Attie@cea.fr 17 Bias remaining after correction: mean of residual x row -x track = f(x track ) Variation of up to 50 μ m with a periodicity of about 3mm (pad width) row 0 row 3 row 8 MPGD2009 – Crete – June 13 th, 2009 row 1 row 2row 4 row 5

18 Spatial resolution David.Attie@cea.fr 18 MPGD2009 – Crete – June 13 th, 2009 Resolution at z=0: σ 0 = 54.8±1.6 μm with 2.7-3.2 mm pads (w pad /55) Effective number of electrons: N eff = 31.8±1.4 consistent with expectations Preliminary

19 Field distortion measurement using laser David.Attie@cea.fr 19 MPGD2009 – Crete – June 13 th, 2009 Beam position 5 cm two laser devices installed on the endplate to light up photosensitive pattern on the cathode (spots and line) deterioration of resolution at z > 40 cm : due to low field 0.9 to 0.7 T in the last 20 cm (significant increase of transverse diffusion) 30 cm50 cm B field map of the magnet Photoelectrons from the cathode pattern

20 Description of the resistive anodes DetectorDielectric layerResistive layerResistivity (MΩ/□) Resistive Kapton Epoxy-glass 75 μm C-loaded Kapton 25 μm ~4-8 Resistive Ink Epoxy-glass 75 μm Ink (3 layers) ~50 μm ~1-2 Resistive KaptonResistive Ink PCB Prepreg Resistive Kapton PCB Prepreg Glue 1-2 μm Glue 1-2 μm David.Attie@cea.fr 20MPGD2009 – Crete – June 13 th, 2009 Resistive Ink

21 Comparison at B=1T, z ~ 5 cm Resistive KaptonResistive Ink RUN 310 v drift = 230 cm/μs V mesh = 380 V Peaking time: 500 ns Frequency Sampling: 25 MHz RUN 549 V drift = 230 cm/μs V mesh = 360 V Peaking time: 500 ns Frequency Sampling: 25 MHz David.Attie@cea.fr 21MPGD2009 – Crete – June 13 th, 2009

22 Pad Response Functions, z ~ 5 cm Resistive Kapton David.Attie@cea.fr MPGD2009 – Crete – June 13 th, 2009 Resistive Ink Γ = 7 mm δ = 10 mm Γ = 11 mm δ = 13 mm 22 x pad – x track (mm)  σ z=5 cm = 68 μm  σ z=5cm = 130 μm !

23 2.2 GeV Momentum David.Attie@cea.fr 23MPGD2009 – Crete – June 13 th, 2009

24 Further tests for Micromegas In 2008/2009 with one detector module In 2010 with 7 detector modules. Reduce the electronic with possibility to bypass shaping Resitive technology choice 4 chips Wire bonded Front End-Mezzanine David.Attie@cea.fr 24MPGD2009 – Crete – June 13 th, 2009

25 Conclusions Two Micromegas with resistive anode have been tested within the EUDET facility using 1T magnet to reduce the transverse diffusion C-loaded Katpon technology gives better result than resistive ink technology First analysis results confirm excellent resolution at small distance with the resistive C-loaded Kapton: 55 μ m for 3 mm pads A moving table for the magnet will be installed in a few weeks which fixes the inhomogeneous B field at high z Plans are to test several resistive layer manufacturing process and capacitance/resistivity, then go to 7 modules with integrated electronics David.Attie@cea.fr 25MPGD2009 – Crete – June 13 th, 2009

26 Acknowledgments David.Attie@cea.fr 26 MPGD2009 – Crete – June 13 th, 2009 Saclay, France: –D. A. –P. Colas –M. Riallot Carleton Univ., Canada: –M. Dixit –Y.-H. Shin –S. Turnbull –R. Woods Montreal Univ. Canada –J.-P. Martin Victoria Univ., Canada –P. Conley –D. Karlen –P. Poffenberger DESY/EUDET


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