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Summary of MM meeting at CEA Saclay, 25/26 Jan 2010 Some selected topics
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CLAS12 and Compass Damien Neyret H4 (RD51) test beam run in fall 2009 in magnetic field Discharge studies (10 prototypes, different meshes) – Resistive layers, GEM foils pre-amplification – Charge spreading Preliminary results – compatible with old Compass studies (D. Thers et al.) – very small differences between classic MM and bulk – no impact of magnetic field on discharge rate so far – promising results from MM+GEM detector – further studies to be done: resist and MM+GEM with high and low intensity hadrons, performances with magnetic field, time resolutions
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Damien Neyret, slide 8
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Sebastien Procureur Simulation of the spark rate in a Micromegas detector with Geant4 Geant4 simulation of MM in hadron beams
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Spark rate estimate and experiment Tool will be useful to optimize detector design Still some doubts about reliability of simulation at low energies Sabstien Procureur
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Shuoxing Wu Analysis on November test beam Standard bulk detectors (2 M Ω/ ☐ ) Resistive Kapton: R3 & R4 (250 M Ω/ ☐ ) Resistive paste: R5 (400K Ω/ ☐ ) Resistive strips: R6 (Few tens of k Ω/ ☐ ) Resistive pads: R7 Segmented one: S1 Y Resistive Non-Resistive XYX X Beam 1 mm0.25 mm1 mm Detectors in test
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Sparking behaviors of R6&S1: eight sparking six sparking five sparking four sparking three sparking two sparking one sparking S1: R6: 400K Ω/ Resistive strips (paste) 8 Shuoxing Wu
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DetectortypeSpark rateSpark current / A Voltage drop SLHC2 standard 7*E-50.45% R3 2 M Ω/ resistive kapton 9.6*E-60.22% R5 250 M Ω/ resistive paste 1.6*E-40.11.5% R6 400K Ω/ resistive strip 6.4*E-60.080.5% R7 tens of K Ω/ resistive pad 5.9*E-40.354.5% Detector performance at same gas gain (~3000)(preliminary): Shuoxing Wu
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Conclusion and outlook: Resistive coating is a successful method to reduce the micromegas spark rate and limit the change in mesh voltage and current. Good spatial resolution<100 m can be reached with a resistive strip coating detector of 1mm pitch. High efficiency (>98%) can be achieved with resistive strip coating micromegas detector, and efficiency drops less than 4% when increasing the beam intensity from 5KHz to 40KHz. The definition of real ‘spark’ needs to be discussed. R&D and studies will continue inside the MAMMA collaboration (next beam test in 6 months) Shuoxing Wu
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Topology of sparks: tests in the laboratory Esther Ferrer Ribas, Arnaud Giganon, Yannis Giomataris, Fabien Jeanneau 24th-25th January 2010, Spark working Meeting Saclay Compare in exactly the same conditions (same electronic chain) Amplitude of the spark (charge released) Dead time Esther Ferrer Ribas
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Measuring sparks: The Chain R1 5.6 KΩ MM detector HT mesh R2 5.6 KΩ C = 470 pF C = 1.5 pF ORTEC 142B Am 241 Oscilloscope Esther Ferrer Ribas
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Examples of pulses STANDARD RESISTIVE Esther Ferrer Ribas
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Amplitude – charge considerations Standard case: the whole mesh is completely decharged Q tot = C det × V mesh C det = 600 pF, V mesh = 400 V N e = Q tot / q e = 24 × 10 4 pC/ q e ~ 1.5 × 10 12 N e ~ 1.5 × 10 12 With the measured pulses in the resistive case: V PA ~ 8 V, C= 1.5 pF Gain PA = 450 mV/pC N e ~ 2 × 10 10 To be continued In a systematic way and with all types of resistive detectors… Need a lower gain PA to avoid saturation in the standard pulses It seems that the released charge in a resistive detector is ~1000lower than in a standard one Dead time probably a high gain as well Careful analyis of the pulses is needed. Study and understand the different regimes < Esther Ferrer Ribas
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Status of test beam data analysis … with emphasis on resistive coating studies Progress and questions 15Meeting at CEA Saclay, 25 Jan 2010Jörg Wotschack, CERN
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R5 Similar to R3 but with more robust resistive layer and different technique (Rui’s talk) R ≈ 5 kΩ Meeting at CEA Saclay, 25 Jan 2010Jörg Wotschack, CERN16 PCB Resistive paste Insulator ≈ 50 µm 1mm x 0.15 mm pad Mesh
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R5 spectra Meeting at CEA Saclay, 25 Jan 2010Jörg Wotschack, CERN17 Gain = 5000 10000 S3 (570 V)
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R5: first observations First measurements of R5 ( 55 Fe source) Sparking starts at HV mesh ≈ 560 V Large currents (several µA) Large HV drop (100–200 V) R5 signal ≈2 x S3 signal For comparison: R3 signal ≈ 0.8 x S3 signal Charge resolution much worse than for S3 (and R3); escape peak not well separated Meeting at CEA Saclay, 25 Jan 2010Jörg Wotschack, CERN18
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Two stages mMega Double mesh (Dmesh) or Gem as options for Preamplification gap
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Gain vs. HV on the mMega and Gem Gain vs. HV on the mMega and Dmesh
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Max. gain vs. HV Gem or D mesh for Fe55 and Alpha
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09/06/2009Rui De Oliveira22 Resistive protections Rui de oliveira
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09/06/2009Rui De Oliveira23
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09/06/2009Rui De Oliveira24 40um kapton >1kv breakdown voltage 1 mm resistor More than 1kv breakdown Voltage 5Kohms (Omegaply in future) Copper Strip 0.1mm x 100mm Pad : 150um x 1.5mm Microvia
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09/06/2009Rui De Oliveira25 R1 c2c3 GND -500V c1 Mesh Strip 0.1mm x 10cm Gas 130um PCB 3mm c4 C1 : 200pF ?Decoupling capacitor for readout C2 : in the range of 5pFParasitic capacitor mesh to strip C3 : in the range of 1.5pFParasitic capacitor strip to GND C4 : in the range of 1nFParasitic capacitor mesh to GND R1 : 1Mohms ?Resistor to discharge strip R2 : 10 Ohms ?Limiting resistor for spark current R3 0 ohms charge
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09/06/2009Rui De Oliveira26 R1 c2c3 GND -400V c1 -In normal operation the induced charge will be split between Z1 and Z2 -Maximum charge will flow through Z1 if Z1<<Z2 -Z2 = (C2 serial C4)//C3 we forget R1 which is high compared to the capacitors -Z2= C2//C3 because C2 serial C4 is close to C2 -C1 min should be 10 x C2//C3 : 10x 6.5pf 65pf min 200pf good choice -to capture the maximum of charge :Z1 should be as low as possible charge Z1 Z2 c4 0 ohms R3
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09/06/2009Rui De Oliveira27 R1 c2c3 GND -500V c1 -In spark mode the current will be mainly define by C4 and Z1 - Z1 at 1Ghz is: ZC1 + R3 -C1=200pF 3 Ohms at 1Ghz and 100 Ohms at 10Mhz -Peak current : 500V/13ohms = 39A during a few ns (170 A without R3) 500V/110 =4.5A during 100ns -the average current is in this case around 0.7uA (1.5uA without R3) -Up to 10 lines should be sparking at the same time looking at the currents measured sparkZ1 c4 0 ohms R3
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09/06/2009Rui De Oliveira28 c2c3 GND -400V c5 signal c4 0 ohms c6 -In normal operation the induced charge will be split between C5 and C6 (on both sides capacitors are virtually grounded) -C6 is in the range of 0.01pf and C5 0.1pf -R1 should be higher than C5 at any frequency but low enough to keep high rates (5K for test 3) Strip 0.1mm x 10cm pad R1
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09/06/2009Rui De Oliveira29 c2c3 GND -400V c5 signal c4 0 ohms c6 -In case of spark C4 will be discharged through C5 (1k Ohms @ 1Ghz, 100k@10Mhz) It will create a peak current of 500V/1k=0.5 A during a few ns +500V/100K= 5mA during 100ns (0.1A with R1=5K) the average value is in this case in the range of 3nA (R1=50K) and 10nA (R1 =5K) Here also many pads should be sparking at the same time (up to 4uA measured) (500 pads have an area of 15mm x 15mm) Strip 0.1mm x 10cm pad R1
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