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ATLAS Tile Hadron Calorimeter at UIUC

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Title: ATLAS Tile Hadron Calorimeter at UIUC


1
ATLAS Tile Hadron CalorimeteratUIUC
  • Dave Petersen, North Park University
  • Working under HEPG Prof. Steve Errede

2
What, Who and Where?
  • A Toroidal Large Hadron Collider Apparatus
    (ATLAS) Detector
  • Over 30 countries involved, from Armenia to the
    United States (over 30 U.S. institutions are
    participating)
  • To be built at CERN, near Geneva, Switzerland

3
What is the LHC?
  • A proton will be colliding with another proton
  • Will achieve energy of 14 TeV, most energetic
    collider in the world

4
ATLAS A Five Story Detector
  • Red line is the beam pipe
  • Pink is the tracking detector
  • Gray is the Solenoid Magnet
  • Yellow is the Electromagnetic Calorimeter
  • Green is the Hadron Calorimeter
  • Gray tubes are muon torodial magnet
  • Blue is the muon detector

5
What is UIUC doing for ATLAS?
  • UIUC is one of 5 institutions working on the
    Scintillating Tile Hadron Calorimeter
  • Produce 200 full-size Submodules
  • Test 3,000 Photomultiplier Tubes

6
What is a Module?
  • 64 Full Modules required for TileCal
  • Each Module is composed of 8 full-size
    submodules, one half-size and one quarter-size.

7
How does the TileCal work?
  • Steel absorbers separated by tiles of
    scintillating plastic
  • When the Hadronic shower, hits the scintillating
    tiles, they emit light in an amount proportional
    to the incident energy
  • Fiberoptics connected to the tiles carry the
    light to PMTs

8
Production of Submodules
  • UIUC wants to finish production by May of 2002
  • Currently have 49 complete
  • Looking to improve efficiency of operations-one
    of the biggest problems is the cleaning of the
    plates that has to be done by hand
  • Over 10 miles of steel required for 192 submodules

9
Quality Steel from the Czechs
  • Notice the grease on these plates
  • Every single plate must be washed by hand
  • There are 192 spacers plates and 32 master plates
    per submodule that must be washed

10
Stamped, Not Laser-Cut
  • Spacers are .004 in. thinner than design
    qualifications
  • The TileCal design calls for submodules must be
    within .002 in.
  • So we place .004 in. stickers on each individual
    spacer before we glue

11
Gluing
  • Takes a little over 2 hours to stack and glue one
    submodule
  • Use glue machine which requires over 8,000 lines
    of code
  • Prof. Errede desires to break the 2 hour barrier
    (his own version of the 4 minute mile)

12
Quality Control
  • After welding, various measurements must be taken
    to ensure that each submodule meets the design
    requirements
  • We must also check each individual slot for the
    tiles to make sure the tiles will fit

13
Analysis of Quality Control
  • Here is a 3D graphical view of the average
    submodule heights broken up by points

14
Painting - In order to rustproof
  • Toxic paint from the Czech Republic is used to
    rustproof the submodules
  • Takes over 3 days to dry
  • Excess paint must be ground off

15
Chaotic Paint?
  • Heres what the rustproof paint does to the steel
    after 3 days

16
Ready to Ship
  • These submodules are ready to go to Argonne,
    where they will be assembled into a full module

17
Quality Control
  • After welding, various measurements must be taken
    to ensure that each submodule meets the design
    requirements
  • We must also check each individual slot for the
    tiles to make sure the tiles will fit

18
3 Kinds of Measurements
  • Height
  • Perpendicularity
  • Bolt Holes

19
QC Man
  • Claremont suggests a designated QC Man

20
QC Analysis
  • Graphs up the wazoo!!

21
QC - Height
  • Design Height 291.7 0.3 -1.5 mm
  • All within design tolerances

22
QC - Height
  • QC Sheet

23
QC - 3D Model
  • Tack Weld
  • Load plate causes sloping
  • Final Weld
  • Final weld causes shrinking at the corners

24
QC - Perpendicularity
  • QC Sheet

25
QC - Perpendicularity
  • UIUC Submodules tend to be perpendicular at all
    points

26
QC - Bolt Holes
  • Design Separation for Bolt Holes from one weld
    bar to the other is 325.00 /- 0.2 mm
  • Design Bolt Hole Height on each weld is 110
    /-0.2 mm

27
QC - Bolt Holes
  • Weld bars pulled in after final weld
  • UIUC tends to produce submodules that have weld
    bars which are slightly off center - about 0.2 mm
    below the center of the submodule

28
Production Status
  • 62 done, only 130 more to go!!

29
What will ATLAS show us?
  • The measurements taken using ATLAS will hopefully
    help explain these theories
  • Higgs Particle and Field
  • Grand Unified Theory

30
Higgs Particle and Field
  • Higgs field is almost indistinguishable from
    empty space
  • All of space is filled with this field, and that
    by interacting with this field, particles acquire
    their masses.
  • Particles that interact strongly with the Higgs
    field are heavy, while those that interact weakly
    are light.

31
Grand Unified Theory
  • Physicists hope to unify the weak, strong, and
    electromagnetic interactions

32
PMT Testing
  • UIUC will perform test on the PMTs that will
    measure
  • PMT Performance
  • PMT Rate Dependence
  • PMT Drift/Stability/Aging Studies
  • UIUC will receive testing boxes shortly

33
Test Each PMT Twice
  • Using LabView, UIUC will test each Hamamatsu
    R-7787 PMT twice, once in the Dark box and once
    in the Light box
  • Test 1 will use DC Light
  • Test 20 PMTs per 2 days
  • Test 2 will use Pulsed Light
  • Test 20 PMTs per day

34
What Ive Learned
  • Multi-national project has just as many
    disadvantages as advantages
  • Lab Machinists are a rare kind of people (see
    next slide)
  • Hands-on physics is for me

35
Thanks To
  • Dr. Steven Errede
  • Dave Forshier
  • Henri Cordier
  • And Fred Cogswell, who when left the project gave
    this farewell
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