Refine
Document Type
- Article (1)
- Doctoral Thesis (1)
- Master's Thesis (1)
-
Aufbau und Inbetriebnahme eines Gasqualitätsmonitors für die HADES-Driftkammern
(2000)
- HADES ist ein hochauflösendes Dielektronenspektrometer, welches derzeit an der GSI in Darmstadt aufgebaut wird. Ziel ist die Messung von Leptonenpaaren, die in schwerioneninduzierten Reaktionen entstehen. Die invariante Masse der Leptonenpaare soll mit einer Genauigkeit von ~ 1% bestimmt werden. Das HADES-Detektorsystem verwendet Vieldraht-Proportionalkammern zur Rekonstruktion der Teilchenspuren. Aus diesen werden in Verbindung mit der Feldinformation des supraleitenden Magneten die Teilchenimpulse gewonnen, welche wiederum in die invariante Masse eingehen. Über die Driftzeit1 werden die genauen Durchstoßpunkte der Teilchenbahnen durch die verschiedenen Ebenen der Driftkammern erhalten. Dazu ist es erforderlich, die Driftgeschwindigkeit der Elektronen im verwendeten Zählgas zu kennen. Änderungen im Mischungsverhältnis des Zählgases (Helium und Isobutan), aber auch Verunreinigungen des Gases (H2O) können die Driftgeschwindigkeit beeinträchtigen. Verunreinigungen (O2) können weiterhin die Effizienz der Driftkammern verschlechtern. Ziel war deshalb der Aufbau eines Monitorsystems, welches auf Änderungen der Gasmischung und auf eventuelle Kontaminationen (im wesentlichen O2 und H2O) sensitiv ist. Zu diesem Zweck wurde ein Driftgeschwindigkeitsmonitor getestet. Er erlaubt eine Messung der Driftgeschwindigkeit mit einer Genauigkeit von bis zu 0,1% (sigma), allerdings bei anderen elektrischen Feldstärken als in den HADES Driftkammern. Während der einwöchigen Strahlzeit im Mai 2000 wurde die Driftgeschwindigkeit mit dem Prototypen des Driftgeschwindigkeitsmonitors gemessen. Die druckkorrigierte Driftgeschwindigkeit erlaubt Rückschlüsse auf die Gasqualität. Die Messungen ergaben, daß die Ortsauflösung in den HADES Driftkammern nicht von Driftgeschwindigkeitsschwankungen dominiert wird. Eine Extrapolation der Meßergebnisse auf die in den HADES Driftkammern vorherrschenden Feldstärkeverhältnisse ist möglich. Eine relative Signalhöhenmessung ist sensitiv auf den Sauerstoffgehalt des Zählgases bis in den ppm-Bereich. Zwei endgültige Versionen des Driftgeschwindigkeitsmonitors wurden aufgebaut und in das HADES Detektorsystem integriert. Je ein Driftgeschwindigkeitsmonitor wurde am Gasein- und am Gasausfluß aufgestellt, um die Driftgeschwindigkeit dort zu messen und Vergleiche zwischen Frischgas und aus den Kammern ausströmendem ”alten“ Gas zuzulassen. Die Auslese und Datenanalyse des Monitorsystems wurde automatisiert.
-
Detector physics of resistive plate chambers
(2003)
- Resistive Plate Chambers (RPCs) are gaseous parallel plate avalanche detectors that implement electrodes made from a material with a high volume resistivity between 10 high 7 and 10 high 12 omega cm. Large area RPCs with 2mm single gaps operated in avalanche mode provide above 98% efficiency and a time resolution of around 1 ns up to a flux of several kHz/cm high 2. These Trigger RPCs will, as an example, equip the muon detector system of the ATLAS experiment at CERN on an area of 3650 m high 2 and with 355.000 independent read out channels. Timing RPCs with a gas gap of 0.2 to 0.3mm are widely used in multi gap configurations and provide 99% efficiency and time resolution down to 50 ps. While their performance is comparable to existing scintillator-based Time-Of-Flight (TOF) technology, Timing RPCs feature a significantly, up to an order of magnitude, lower price per channel. They will for example equip the 176 m high 2 TOF barrel of the ALICE experiment at CERN with 160.000 independent read out cells. RPCs were originally operated in streamer mode providing large signals which simplifies readout electronics and gap uniformity requirements. However, high rate applications and detector aging issues made the operation in avalanche mode popular. This was also facilitated by the development of new highly quenching C2F4H2-based gas mixtures with small contents of SF6. While the physics of streamers is difficult to study, the avalanche mode opened the possibility for a detailed simulation of the detector physics processes in RPCs. Even though RPCs were introduced in the early eighties and have been (will be) used in experiments, there are still disagreements about the explanation of several aspects of the RPC performance. The high efficiency of single gap RPCs would require a large ionization density of the used gases, which according to some authors contradicts measurements. Even in the case of a large ionization density the gas gain has to be extremely large, in order to arrive at the observed RPC efficiency. This raises other questions: A very strong space charge effect is required to explain the observed small avalanche charges around 1 pC. Doubts have been raised whether an avalanche can progress under such extreme conditions without developing into a streamer. To overcome these difficulties, other processes, like the emission of an electron from the cathode, were suggested. Moreover, the shape of measured charge spectra of single gap RPCs differs largely from what is expected from the statistics of the primary ionization and the avalanche multiplication. In this thesis we discuss the detector physics processes of RPCs, from the primary ionization and the avalanche statistics to the signal induction and the read out electronics. We present Monte-Carlo simulation procedures that implement the described processes. While the fundament of the described model and some results were already published elsewhere [1], the subject of this thesis is the implementation of the space charge effect. We present analytic formulas for the electrostatic potential of a point charge in the gas gap of an RPC. These formulas were developed in collaboration with the University of Graz [2] and were published in [3, 4]. The simulation model presented in [1] is completed by the dynamic calculation of the space charge field using these formulas. Since the gas parameters like drift velocity and the Townsend and attachment coefficients depend on the electric field, they are calculated dynamically as well. The functional dependence of these parameters on the field is obtained with the simulation programs MAGBOLTZ and IMONTE. For the primary ionization parameters, we use the values that are predicted by the program HEED. While the described procedure only simulates the longitudinal avalanche development towards the anode of the RPC, we also present more dimensional models that allow a careful study of the transverse repulsive and attractive forces of the space charge fields, and of the consequences for the avalanche propagation. We shall show that the efficiencies of single gap Timing RPCs is indeed explained by the high primary ionization density (about 9.5 /cm as predicted by HEED) and a large effective Townsend coefficient (around 113 /mm as predicted by IMONTE). We show that the space charge field reaches the same magnitude as the applied electric field in avalanches at large gas gain. This strong space charge effect effectively suppresses large values for the avalanche charges. The shape of the simulated charge spectra is very similar to the measurements. Also the simulated average charges are close to the experimental results. RPCs are operated in a strong space charge regime over a large range of applied voltage, contrary to wire chambers. We apply only standard detector physics simulations to RPCs. The performance of Timing and Trigger RPCs is well reproduced by our simulations. The results concerning the space charge effect were presented and discussed at the 'RPC 2001' workshop [5] and on the '2002 NSS/MIC' conference [6].
-
The ALICE TPC, a large 3-dimensional tracking device with fast readout for ultra-high multiplicity events
(2010)
- The design, construction, and commissioning of the ALICE Time-Projection Chamber (TPC) is described. It is the main device for pattern recognition, tracking, and identification of charged particles in the ALICE experiment at the CERN LHC. The TPC is cylindrical in shape with a volume close to 90 m3 and is operated in a 0.5 T solenoidal magnetic field parallel to its axis. In this paper we describe in detail the design considerations for this detector for operation in the extreme multiplicity environment of central Pb–Pb collisions at LHC energy. The implementation of the resulting requirements into hardware (field cage, read-out chambers, electronics), infrastructure (gas and cooling system, laser-calibration system), and software led to many technical innovations which are described along with a presentation of all the major components of the detector, as currently realized. We also report on the performance achieved after completion of the first round of stand-alone calibration runs and demonstrate results close to those specified in the TPC Technical Design Report.
