Title: Liquid Xenon Detector and Related Topics
1Liquid Xenon Detector and Related Topics
- Liquid Xenon Optical Properties (TN-020)
- PMT Test Facility
- TERAS Beam Test Preliminary Results
- Beam Test in Oct-Dec 03 at PSI
- Cryostat
- Schedule
- S.Mihara
- For Liquid Xenon Detector Group
2LXe optical properties (MEG-TN020)
- The ?att, ?abs and n are not very well known
properties for LXe in the VUV - Contraddictory measurements ? contaminations?
- Controlled measurements of epsilon, n exist in
gas phase - CAN WE EXTRAPOLATE FROM THE GASEOUS TO THE LIQUID
PHASE? - Yes we can extrapolate ? give a prediction for n
- Measurement of ?R (LP) ? measurement of n
3Dielectric properties vs density
- In gaseous phase Clausius-Mossotti
(Lorentz-Lorenz) - LINEAR IN !!
- At increasing density non linear effects (virial
expansion)
2 molecules 3 molecules .
- Molar liquid density 0.0229 cm-3 ? reasonable
- Xe is a non polar atom
4Check linearity at different wavelengths
On the absorption lines the FLL function is only
marginally valid but it can be considered an
acceptable approximation still at the LXe
emission line...
5near the absorption line?
The Xe has the first absorption band at ?146.9
nm (h?8.4 eV)
Re e Im e
2.24 10-2
Liquid
r
Gas
Increasing
4.49 10-5
Exciton Xe absorption
It can test the linearity on ? of the FLL
function on a large range of density
6A(?) in VUV gas-liquid
...as it can be seen directly from the results
obtained.
A(?) ? n
experimental data dilute gas
extrapolated value (fit)
7 n extrapolation
- We can extrapolate a value of n1.69 0.02 at
175 nm - How this compares to published measurements?
- Subtil et al. (1987) 1.71
- Chepel et al. (2002) 1.69
- Barkov et al. (1996) 1.56 (180 nm)
- Pretty good agreement
8A relation between n and ?R
- In gaseous phase
- In liquid phase fluctuations (Einstein equation)
- Hence
- A measurement of ?R gives a hint on n
- ?R (29 2) cm ? n (1.71 0.015) !
- Ishida et al, NIM A384 (1997) 380
8th power
9PMT Test Facility
10MEG PMT cryogenic test facility PURPOSES
- - SYSTEMATIC TEST OF THE PMTs FOR MEG IN
OPERATING CONDITIONS immersed in liquid Xe - BUILD AN EVOLUTIVE CRYOSTAT
- PHASE 1 MANUAL OPERATION WITH LXe
EMPTING/FILLING FOR EACH PMT - PHASE 2 MANUAL OPERATION WITHOUT LXe EMPTING
- PHASE 3 TEST OF CARTRIDGE OF PMTs WITHOUT LXe
EMPTING - - SETUP A CRYOGENIC LABORATORY AT INFN-PISA
- - GET EXPERIENCE IN HANDLING LXe
- - OTHER MEASUREMENTS ON LXe
11MEG PMTct Cryogenic/Vacuum Diagram
Phase II
12MEG PMTct - Cryostat
13Cryostat delivered from CINEL phase I
- Almost all material delivered
- Cryostat
- Pumping system
- Leak detector
- Feed-throughs
- Signal
- Xenon
- Gases
- Oxisorb
- Material for phase 2/3
- Waiting for
- Xe transportation tank (needed CE certification)
- Clean pipes
- Slow control
- PMTs!
14and phase II linear motion and gate valves
- In phase II/III Xe should be kept liquid
- Gate valve
- The PMT can be extracted from the top of the
- cryostat
- Cross
- Linear movement attuator
15Calibration source ? and ? (LED)
25 mm
- ?-source that is stable in liquid Xenon
- 3 kBq 241Am deposited on a micro-etched surface
- Ordered to Campoverde srl.
- Quotation from a Czech factory which provides
gold-plated sources. - Source and PMT holder under
- construction
- Reference PMT
- Hamamatsu R7400-9
16?-source
Difference in a and ß waveform in Xe
17In parallel PMT test at warm temperature
- Blue LED pulser (same as LP) to study the PMTs in
controlled conditions - Gain vs T
- Gain vs time
- Waiting for
- VME LED
- pulser (this
- week)
LED fiber filter PMT
18PMT Test Facility Status
- The PMT test facilty is close to be operational
- Almost all material delivered also for phase
II/III - Sources in preparation
- In parallel test at warm temperature.
19TERAS BEAM TEST
- Overview of the test
- Energy measurement
- Position reconstruction
- Timing measurement
20TERAS beam in April 03
- Xenon liquefaction completed 10 days before the
beam time. - Purification of xenon in gas phase.
- Data acquisition
- 40MeV(main), 20MeV, 10MeV
- Different incident positions
- Different incident Angles
- Materials in front of the detector
- PMT high gain runs
21Gas Phase Purification System
- Xenon extracted from the chamber is purified by
passing through the getter. - Purified xenon is returned to the chamber and
liquefied again. - Circulation speed 5-6cc/minute
- Enomoto Micro Pump MX-808ST-S
- 25 liter/m
- Teflon, SUS
22TERAS g Beam Line
- Compton Spectrum
- (Eg-Ec/2)2(Ec/2)2
- Electron beam
- Energy 764MeV
- Energy spread 0.48(sigma)
- Divergence lt0.1mrad(sigma)
- Beam size 1.6mm(sigma)
- Laser photon
- Energy 1.17e-6x4 eV (for 40MeV)
- Energy spread 2x10-5 (FWHM)
- Divergence unknown
- Beam size unknown
Collimator size
23 MC simulation
Data
D
D
Short labs
Previous Test
D
D 20100 ? 025cm
D
Long labs
This Test
D
D
24Effect of Material
- 5mmt, 10mmt, 15mmt Al
- 15mmt Al4mmt Stainless Steel
- 5mmt Pb
Al, Stainless, Pb plates
LP
5mm Al 0.053X0
10mm Al 0.11X0
15mm Al 0.16X0
15mm Al 4mm Stainless Stell 0.398X0
5mmt Pb 0.89X0
2nd collimator
COBRA thickness 0.197 X0
25Position/Incident Angle Scan
- Incident Position
- 10 different positions for 40MeV g (blue and red)
- 2 different positions for 10MeV and 20MeV g (red)
- Incident Angle (40MeV)
- 0, 7.5, and 15 degree on the center
- Not analyzed yet
q
LP
62mm
26Detector Operation Status
- No serious trouble during the test
- Except one of two TDC modules was broken in the
final run (PMT high gain run) - Total amount of xenon used 120 liter
- Stable operation by the pulse-tube
refrigerator/Liquid Nitrogen cooling pipe (only
while circulation) - PMT calibration as usual (LED/alpha/cold gas
alpha)
27Energy Measurement
28Energy Spectrum Fitting
- For understanding simply
- Suppose Response function is an asymmetric
Gaussian
Response function
Compton Spectrum
Eg
Npe
s left
Convolution of Compton Spectrum Response
Function
s right
29Energy Spectrum Fitting contd
- Require D(depth parameter)gt45
- 34 of events in the range of 40MeV/-4MeV are
discarded by this requirement - Suppose Compton Spectrum around the edge
- (E-Ec/2)2Ec2/4
- Detector Response Function
- Gaussian with Exponential tail
- f(x) Nexpt/s2(t/2-(x-x0), xltx0t
- Nexp-1/2((x-x0)/s)2, xgtx0t
- Convolution
- Integration /- 5s
- Fitting is done in two steps
- Determine the edge position
- Fix the edge in the 2nd fitting for determining
the other prams
Detection efficiency (estimated by MC) 74
within /- 4 energy cut at 52.8 MeV (cf.
Progress Report Jul 02) (16 of events are lost
due to interaction with material in front of the
active volume)
26
30Dependence on Eg
- Very preliminary
- Typical 10, 20, 40MeV data fit using the
convolution function - Error estimation is not finalized. Conservatively
30 error for the energy resolution is supposed. - Resolution is shown in sigma.
31Energy Resolution vs. Depth Parameter
- For g incident at the detector center
- D gt 35, 45, 55.85
- Resolution lt 2 in sigma except shallow events
(Dlt45).
D
Number of Photoelectrons
32Material Effect on the Resolution
- No apparent deterioration of the resolution
- Loss of efficiency
Al 5mm
Pb 5mm
Trigger Threshold
COBRA Thickness
33Position Dependence
1.85 in s
1.83 in s
1.80 in s
34Measurement with half the front PMT switched off
- To simulate the convex front geometry of the
cryostat - MC simulation (reported in the last review
meeting) - TERAS data
- Switch off half of the PMTs in the front face
- Use 4x4 PMTs out of 6x6 PMTs
- Switch off PMTs on the side walls
35VLP and Curved Detector
- Shape studies
- Compare LiXe and a VLP (100 x 50 x 50 cm3) to
check the effects of a different geometry on
position and energy resolution. - no difference with the curved detector for
position resolution (10.6 mm FWHM in both cases
for a realistic situation) a 3 systematic
correction is needed on both coordinates for VLP - slight improvement in energy resolution (from 4
to 3.5) - however, more critical problems of energy
containment -
- a much larger volume (1.5 m3) of Xenon would
be needed (and PMTs!).
36TERAS Data
Only 4x4 PMTs on the front face
- Switching off half the front PMTs
- Compton Edge shifts by 6.2
- Resolutions are almost same (1.84 to 1.85 in s)
before and after switching off. - Switching off PMTs on the
- side wall(s)
- 1 plane off ? 2.05 in s
- 2 planes off ? 2.22 in s
- 3, 4 planes off ? gt 3 in s
Number of Photoelectrons
37Switching off PMTs on side walls
D
- Deterioration of the energy resolution when
switching off PMTs is not mainly caused by loss
of Npe. - PMTs on the side walls compensate 1st conversion
point dependence.
1 plane off
Number of Photoelectrons
3 planes off
D
Number of Photoelectrons
38Effect of a faulty PMT
- All PMTs on s1.8
- Switching off one PMT on the front wall.
- the nearest PMT ?s2.3
- 2nd nearest PMT ?s1.9
- 3rd nearest PMT ?s1.9
- 300 PMTs on the front face in the final detector
- 4/300 1.3 loss of acceptance
F30 off s2.3
F22 off s1.9
F28 off s1.9
39Position Reconstruction
- Simple weighted average
- Using all PMTs on the front
- Very fast, but not so good resolution and bias
exits - Localized weight method
- Using only selected PMTs around the energy
release points to reduce the shower fluctuation
effect
40Simple Average Method
Depth
- Data and MC are in good agreement.
- Reconstruction bias exists.
Depth
Depth
41Localized Weight Method
- Projection to x and y directions.
- Peak point and distribution spread
- Position reconstruction using the selected PMT
42Samples of Reconstruction
1mm
43Reconstruction Bias
44Position ReconstructionResolution
45Timing Measurement
- 128 TDC channels for the PMTs around the front
face. - Leading-edge discriminator with threshold level
at 12mV. - Start timing of the TDCs is determined by the
xenon detector itself. - Laser start timing ?1ms jitter.
- Electron tagging counter was placed in a TERAS
Q-magnet. Difficult to achieve good resolution as
a reference.
- Same method as in KSR electron beam test is
employed for timing measurement. - Detector is divided to left and right groups and
arrival time difference was compared to evaluate
the resolution.
46Timing MeasurementVery Preliminary Result
- We observed that
- Timing resolution improves as the PMT gain
increases. - Timing resolution improves as Npe increases.
- The best value (48.8 psec in sigma) was obtained
for gt160MeV synchrotron radiation light taken in
a dedicated run
Left
Effect of shower fluctuation along the g incident
direction is canceled, while the effect
perpendicular to it is not.
g
Right
47 Open Questions
- Compton Spectrum Shape
- Broader than simulated shape
- Detector effect ?
- Reflection or absorption on the PMT window?
- Rate Dependence
48Compton Spectrum Shape
- Broad peak of the total photoelectrons.
- Many low energy events.
Maybe beam spectrum
We have not a clear answer
threshold
49Comparison with revised MCCompton g spectrum
shape
MC
Data
- Electron beam spread at the collision point
- Collimator position
50Reflection or Absorption on the PMT window?
D
(Qsum-Qfront)/Qsum
Qsum
51Discrepancy at Low Energy Side
zlt0
Data
MC
0ltzlt3
total photoelectrons
total photoelectrons
z first conversion depth cm , 0 means surface
of LXe.
52Absorption in the Mn layer?
Previous
- Reflection cannot explain simultaneously both
gamma and alpha data. - The previous model (in LP) uses a Mn layer to
keep the surface conductivity of the PD at low
temperature. - The new model uses Al strip instead of the Mn
layer. - Compare responses for different incident angles
of light.
window
light
Mn layer
Photocathode
New
300um Al strip
53Rate Dependence
LED
- Rate dependence
- In case of high current in TERAS, SR light
background is huge to decrease the effective gain
of the PMTs. - Data with a 60Co source in front of the entrance
wall at different distance to simulate g
background. - Detailed analysis to interpret the measured
dependence for the actual detector operating
condition is not finished yet
a
54Oct-Dec 03 Beam Test at pE1
55The elementary process
? - (essentially) at rest captured on protons ?
- p ? ?0 n ? - p ? n ? ?0 ? ? ?
Photon spectrum
129 MeV
54.9
82.9
56CM and Lab frame
M?/2
?M?/2(1??cos?)
?
M?/2
Eg55 MeV ? ? ?
57Angular selection
- ?s back to back in lab 55 and 84 MeV
- ?E?/ E? lt 1 ? ??? lt 5o
- This fixes the angular acceptance to
- 6?10-4 /56 1.07 ? 10-5
5o 87mrad 8.7cm _at_1m
?? ?-?
(83-55)/0.5
58Experimental configuration
TARGET?
- Rate
- Background
- Thin/small (angle/X0)
- Handling
NaI
Previous use
- GH2 (Panofsky.)
- LH2 (PIBETA)
- CH2 (MEGA)
- LiH (??e ? at SIN)
LXe
Coincidence C !A NaI (Offline LXe)
59CH2 target(1)
- Easy to handle
- Active (scintillator) but ...
- Capture rate on Carbon 1300 capture rate on
protons (s-wave capture ?Z4) ? rate
suppression by factor 650 - Range R ? p3 ? a few cm
- ?R/R(200 me /m?)1/2 f(E/m?)
(Segre, Ritson,Rossi) - 3.5 ? OK
- Background?
60CH2 target(2)
- Capture on C dominant
- Radiative ?- capture ? ok. Dominant BKG is gamma
from radiative pion capture nuclear (i.e. few
MeV) de-excitation - Danger from ?- C ? ?0 B
- EThreshold 10 MeV no ?- at rest (pth 55 MeV/c)
- ?0 emitted in forward direction
61Fitzgerald et al.
- fast ? - on (CH2)N
- Comparable rate (incoherent capture,a factor of
three expected) - BKG measured with graphite target
- 14 MeV difference!
?0 kinetic energy
C-ex on Carbon C-ex on H
62Applied in MEGA
- A CH2 calibration target was used in MEGA
- The BKG from ?- c-ex in flight is visible in the
low energy tail - Could be measured (graphite target) and subtracted
3.3FWHM
5.7FWHM
63Possibility of CH2?
- A clear peak is visible
- We can trigger on the target
- Need to measure BKG with Carbon target?
- RATE??
64Hydrogen target
LH2
- The most natural choice
- ? 0.071 g/cm3
- Range p 80 MeV/c ? R ? 14 cm, ?R ? 0.5 cm
- 110 MeV/c ? R ? 41 cm, ?R ?
1.4 cm
GH2
- Already available
- ? 6.7?10-3 g/cm3
- Range p 80 MeV/c ? R ? 150 cm, ?R ? 5.6 cm
- 110 MeV/c ? R ? 450 cm, ?R
? 15 cm
65Rate
- dp/p up to 0.8 FWHM
- ?- flux 8105/s at 1.6mA
661999 measurement
10FWHM
- D100 cm
- 10 x 10 window
- 9.5 hours
- no light in LYSO
- 60 cm (NaI) 75 cm (CsI)
- 11 x 13 window
67Cryostat Design
68Cryostat
- Fabrizio Raffaelli has joined the
design/construction group for the cryostat. - All information can be found at http//meg.psi.ch
- ?subproject ? calorimeter ?Design and
Construction
69Thickness of the Walls/Covers
- Suppose the pressure tolerance of 0.3MPa for the
inner vessel and 0.1MPa for the outer vessel
(vacuum insulation layer).
70Stress Distribution
71Deformation
72Strength Calculation forthe G10 Support and the
Brace
73Heat Load Calculation
- See also T. Haruyamas talk on Jul 2002 review
meeting. - Main contribution is from PMT and cables.
- One pulse tube refrigerator can compensate the
load.
74Metal gasket for the inner vessel flanges
- One possible manufacture (in Japan) is USUI.
- Usage condition
- Pressure 0 - 0.3 MPa
- Temperature -110 100 degree C
- Fluid Liquid xenon
- Flange and bolt SUS316L
- U-tight seal dimension
- Cross section 5.5 mm diam
- Material Aluminum(outer), Stainless(Inner),
Spring(Inconel)
Cover
Flange
Special Shape ?We need a mold for casting.
75T. Haruyamas talk on Jul 2002 review meeting
76Operation Scheme
T. Haruyamas talk on Jul 2002 review meeting
77Some questions and remarks after seeing the
Cryostat drawingsby Fabrizio Raffaelli
- Which is the design pressure for the inner vessel
? - Is the testing procedure has been already studied
during the fabrication steps and which are the
final acceptance tests? - Is the safety has been already studied?
- The of safety relief devices are already
implemented? For instance if there is a xenon
leak into the vacuum the pressure on the outer
vessel can increase more than 1 atm. - Is the cold sealing has been already chosen and
which are the specification for the groove
accuracy ? - Is the cold window has been already studied ?
- The pre-cooling system is already implemented in
the inner vessel but its efficiency is already
studied? - Is an heating system has been considered to empty
the inner vessel? - Which are the envisaged mounting steps?
- Which adjustments are envisaged to position the
Inner vessel in cold condition ? - A lot of other questions will raise going in the
drawing details.
78Remarks after seeing the drawingsby Fabrizio
Raffaelli
- Covers
- I see that the polished area of the sealing
surface is not protected and it is not well
localized from the point of view of machining
operations and further hands polished operation. - The inner vessel flange is quite slim (30 mm) and
I am worry that after the welding with the I.V.
body we are not able to guarantee the necessary
flatness. - I think we need to study the technological
construction step and may be weld a long collar
before machining the flange. - Since the shape of the cover is not simple the
oring especially the cold one should be custum
made and I think will require a mold.
79Photon Detector
2002
2003
2004
2005
Large Prototype
Beam Test
Beam Test
Engineering runs
Vessel Design
Assembly Test
Manufactoring
PMT Delivery Testing
Assembly
Test
Refrigerator
Manufactoring
Assembly
Liq. Purification
Test
Milestone
Assembly
Design
Manufactoring
80Summary
- Liquid Xenon optical properties (TN-020).
- PMT test facility (Phase I) is close to be
operational. - TERAS beam test results
- Energy Resolution at 40 MeV 2 in sigma
- Needs more careful analysis to treat shallow
events - Large Prototype beam test at pE1 in Oct-Dec 03.
- CH2, GH2, LH2
- Cryostat design will be finalized in 2003.