Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byEdwin Wilcox Modified over 9 years ago
1
IEEE 2011 NSS-MIC Valencia Yiftah Silver October 26 th 2011
2
Tel Aviv University, Department of Physics Yan Benhammou, Meny Ben Moshe, Erez Etzion, Yiftah Silver University of Michigan, Department of Physics Dan Levin, Claudio Ferretti, J. Chapman, Curtis Weaverdyck, Robert Ball Integrated Sensors, LLC. P. S. Friedman Oak Ridge National Laboratory Robert Varner 10/26/2011 Yiftah Silver, Tel-Aviv University2 Plasma Panel Sensor (PPS) collaboration
3
Widely used, commercial product Invented in 1964 10 7 -10 8 units manufactured 2010 ~$0.20 / sq inch with electronics ~100,000 hour lifetime 10/26/2011 3Yiftah Silver, Tel-Aviv University Plasma Display Panel (PDP) matrix configurationcoplanar configuration 2 main technologies
4
Hermetically sealed volume no gas flow Targeted cell size of about 50-200 µm excellent spatial resolution. Scalable panel size up to meter size with thickness 0.3 - 5 cm Fast cell response rise-time ~1 ns 10/26/2011 Yiftah Silver, Tel-Aviv University4 Plasma Panel Sensor (PPS) aims to inherit PDP features Investigate plasma panels for inexpensive, large area arrays of micro-Geiger cells for detection of MIPs and heavily ionizing particles : gas mixture, pressure, pulse shape… We are trying to use plasma TV’s as radiation detectors
5
Test Chamber (coplanar configuration) Surface discharge electrode studies Gas mixture, pressure studies Commercial PDP (matrix configuration) Starting with commercial DC-PDP Gas mixtures, pressure and Electric field Pulse timing – rise time, recovery time Pulse spreading Simulations (both test chamber and commercial PDP) COMSOL: electric field and charge motion electric field and charge motion Estimate capacitance of cells SPICE: Electrical characteristics of PPS signal 10/26/2011 Yiftah Silver, Tel-Aviv University5 Current progress in Plasma Panel Sensor investigation
6
10/26/2011 Yiftah Silver, Tel-Aviv University6 Prototype PPS coplanar electrodes configuration Electrode layout with lateral discharge gap e- ion+
7
10/26/2011 Yiftah Silver, Tel-Aviv University7 Prototype PPS test chamber motorized Z-stage to vary drift gap Testing glass PPS substrates Staging Vacuum-Pressure Chamber Integrated four component gas mixing system First measurements with the prototype PPS test chamber have recently commenced
8
10/26/2011 Yiftah Silver, Tel-Aviv University8 Commercial monochromatic PDP study dielectric + + + + + + + - - - Discharge gap glass Ni anode 800 m glass 340 m SnO2 cathodes Columnar discharge Pixels at intersections of orthogonal electrode array Measurements of background signal and response to a radioactive sources with different gases Cosmic ray Muons detection Simulated E-field in the PDP pixel 5 mm 0 -5 mm E-field is localized No E-field e-
9
10/26/2011 Yiftah Silver, Tel-Aviv University9 Simulated β spectrum in panel HV SnO 2 Ni 2D readout is possible (both sense lines and HV) Discriminator and counter Measurements Setup (I) radioactive source response DAQ includes: 4 channels 5 GHz digitizer Collimated 90 Sr source is placed above the active area of the panel KeV
10
During discharge cell becomes conductive, Voltage drops E field drops discharge self-terminates Simplified model of a capacitor discharge yield a very similar signal. (in most of the tested conditions) A more elaborate Spice model incorporates stray capacitance and inductances 10/26/2011 Yiftah Silver, Tel-Aviv University10 Real VS. simulated signals Signal from panelSimulated results nsec 100 0
11
10/26/2011 Yiftah Silver, Tel-Aviv University11 Collimated 90 Sr source 20cm above the panel over different parts of the active area – 4X4 pixel array Each bin shows the hit rate on one pixel - background subtracted PDP 2D ReadOut 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4
12
10/26/2011 Yiftah Silver, Tel-Aviv University12 Measurements Setup (II) – Cosmic ray muons PMT1 PMT2
13
Both pure CF4 and SF6 gases shows a signal with a very fast response time. Arrival time is defined with respect to the hodoscope trigger 10/26/2011 Yiftah Silver, Tel-Aviv University13 Cosmic ray muon detection Pure SF6 200 Torr 1530 Volt
14
With pure CF4 gas We have a discharge plateau with low background… 10/26/2011 14Yiftah Silver, Tel-Aviv University Final voltage scan with cosmic ray muons plateau
15
About 8% of all triggers were associated with signal from the panel In order to increase the geometrical acceptance we are investigating PDPs with higher resolutions i.e. smaller pixels and smaller distances between pixels with different discharge gaps 10/26/2011 Yiftah Silver, Tel-Aviv University15 Cosmic ray muons Pixel active area ~1.3mm 2 total active area: ~20mm 2 Hodoscope triggering area ~250mm 2 Geometric acceptance for muons ~10% When taking into account the geometric acceptance, pixel efficiency for muon detection is in order of 80%-90%!
16
The detection of cosmic muons with an off-the- shelf generic PDP is established. Prof of concept measurements have been made with different gasses: Xe, Ar, CF4, SF6, Ar-CO2, Ar-CF4 in various mixtures. Various operating voltages and pressures are investigated Discharge pulses: Have large amplitude - no need for amplification electronics Uniform (for each gas) Leading edge rise time of few ns Observed pulses associated to single pixels (~1mm 2 ) with minimal discharge spreading between pixels 10/26/2011 Yiftah Silver, Tel-Aviv University16 Conclusions
17
Further explore the parameters (gas content, pressure, voltage, discharge gap etc.) for optimized detector operation Improve ReadOut electronics Increase the number of pixels in the panel’s active area Efficiency measurements in a muon test beam 10/26/2011 Yiftah Silver, Tel-Aviv University17 Future plans
18
10/26/2011 Yiftah Silver, Tel-Aviv University18 Thank you… Any questions?
19
10/26/2011 Yiftah Silver, Tel-Aviv University19 Backup
20
discharge cell: important gas processes primary ionizati on metastabl e generatio n Excitation Penning ionizati on Image from: Flat Panel Displays and CRTs (Chapter 10) L. Tannas, Jr, photon emission Metastabl e ejection ion ejected electron 10/26/2011 Yiftah Silver, Tel-Aviv University20
21
10/26/2011 Yiftah Silver, Tel-Aviv University21 Streamer formation
22
10/26/2011 Yiftah Silver, Tel-Aviv University22 Signal from 4 pixels RO 27(I) 26(II) RO 29(I) 27(II) HV 95(I) 94(II) HV 93(I+II) All the signals from all the measurements look the same! 26 27 28 29 30 HV 9395
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.