Title: GEM R
1GEM RD Efforts at CNS
- Hideki Hamagaki
- Center for Nuclear Study
- University of Tokyo
2Contents
- Recollection of Early Days
- Motivation
- Getting started
- Making GEMs
- GEM application
- GEM-TPC
- HBD
- GEM characteristics and performances
- Gain variation
- Gain dependence on P/T
- Ion feedback
- Making it thicker
- Summary and outlook
3What was the Motivation?
- PHENIX Upgrade of Inner Detectors
- Discussions started in 2001
- HBD/TPC hybrid using CF4 gas GEM
4Requirements from Physics
- Low-mass ee- pairs
- better rejection power for ee- pairs from Dalitz
decay and photon external conversions - low-mass vector mesons -gt chiral symmetry
restoration - thermal pairs
- Better tracking capability
5Effort Has Begun in 2002
- M. Inuzuka joined my group
- A main player of GEM development for 3 years
until he got a permanent research position at
Department of Conservation Science, National
Research Institute for Cultural Properties, Tokyo
(?????????????) - Intimate collaboration with Toru Tamagawa
- Having started with CERN-GEM
- learn what is GEM
- purchase GEMs from CERN
- building test setup
6First Try with CERN-GEM
- July 2002 Gas chamber readout pad design
- Aug. 2002 fabrication
- Sep. 2002 test with a RI source
7Signal Amplification
- In the fall of 2002 the first signal from
CERN-GEM ever seen in Japan
VGEM400V (HV2-1600V), HV1-2200V
VGEM390V (HV2-1560V), HV1-2160V
8ADC Distributions
9Gain vs. VGEM
? 3-GEM, P10 ? 2-GEM, P10 ? 3-GEM,
ArCO2 ? 2-GEM, ArCO2 ? 3-GEM, CF4
S.Bachmann et al. Nucl. Instr. and
Meth. A438(1999)376
Weizmann Institute of Science December, 2002
10Making GEM with a Dry Etching Method
- Need to make GEM in Japan
- convenience for further studies
- variations optimization
- Look for a capable company
- Found a company in the fall of 2002
- Fuchigami Micro (now SciEnergy) has expertise on
the dry etching technologies - ended up with a method different from CERN
- Some results by the spring of 2003
- (NIM A525, 529, 2004)
CERN
70µm
Fuchigami Micro
70µm
11Characterstics of Early CNS-GEM
- Comparable gain to CERN-GEM
- Many have problems
- Low resistance or sparks at low HV
- Lower breakdown point than CERN-GEM
12Improvement of CNS-GEM
CERN-GEM
- Efforts to improve resistance and to reduce
sparks at initial HV-on - cleaning desmear process
- desmear not needed in wet etching, but crucial
in dry etching - Breakdown voltage
- Over-hung of Copper edges
- Reduction of over-hung by the spring of 2004
CNS-GEM
13Test of Gain Variation
- Gain measurement with Fe55 source
- Gain of CNS-GEM seems to stabilize in shorter
time - Difference may be due to the difference in the
hole shape? - Many possibilities
- hole shape
- insulation material/surface
Blue CERN-GEM(Gas flow)
Black CNS-GEM(Gas noflow) Red CNS-GEM(Gas
flow)
14Development of GEM-TPC
- Normal TPC uses MWPC for electron multiplication
- Use GEM (Gas Electron Multiplier) instead of MWPC
15Advantage of GEM-TPC
- Ion Feedback to drift region can be smaller
- Requirement to gating grid is less demanding
- Signals can be shorter because of no tail from
ions - E x B effect is less because of uniform E field
parallel to B expect in a tiny region near GEM
holes - Flexible arrangement of readout pads is possible
- -gt Better position resolution two-particle
separation - RD for ILC is under way (talk by A. Sugiyama)
16Building GEM-TPC prototype
- Original TPC with MWPC was developed by T. Isobe
K. Ozawa in 2002 2003 (NIM A564, 190, 2006) - Modified by S.X. Oda to use GEM in 2003 2004
(NIM A566, 312, 2006) - Two types of readout pads
- rectangular chevron type
- 1.09 mm x 12 mm
- Charge-sensitive pre-amp
- 1 ms time-constant
- Readout with 100 MHz FADC
17FEE DAQ development
- Charge sensitive Pre-amp
- 1pF feedback capacitance
- 100W difference drive
- FADC(????RPV-160)
- 100MHz sampling rate
- 8bit dynamic range
- Original DAQ System (By T. Isobe)
- CES RIO3 module to control VME bus
- PowerPC on board CPU
- 100 MBytes/s bandwidth on VME
- Linux base VMEDAQ
TPC Pre-amp
18Typical signals from GEM-TPC
With 100 MHz FADC Gas Ar-C2H6 Drift length
85mm Rectangular pad Beam 1 GeV/c electron
from KEK-PS in May 2004
Time (6.4ms640bin, 1bin10ns)
Track
19Performance of GEM-TPC (I)
- Position resolution
- x direction
- z direction
- resolution gets worse with increase of drift
length - diffusion effect
- magnitude depends on gas species
P10
ArC2H6(30)
CF4
Electric field (V/cm) Drift velocity (cm/ms) Diffusion (T)_at_1cm (mm) Diffusion (L)_at_1cm (mm)
Ar(90)CH4(10) 130 5.5 570 360
Ar(70)C2H6(30) 390 5.0 320 190
CF4 570 8.9 110 80
R P10 chevron B P10 rect. Y ArC2H6 rect. G
CF4 chevron
20Performance of GEM-TPC (II)
36 mm of P10 gas drift length 85mm
- Energy loss measurement
- P10 s(55Fe5.9 keV) 11
- Ne(primary) 222 for 5.9keV X-ray in P10 ? 1.7
times larger than statistical estimate - obtained energy loss is as expected for various
particles with different momentum - Beam rate effect
- no change up to 5000 cps/cm2
- good enough for HI applications
- further studies may be needed
21UV Photon Detection
- Effort was started in the fall of 2003, by M.
Inuzuka, and was succeeded by Y. Aramaki, backed
up by Yokkaichi Ozawa (2005 2006) - CsI photo-cathode
- CF4 gas
- Cherenkov radiator
- large index of refraction
- transparent down to low l
- Electron multiplication
- no window in between transmission, material
- Ne(Cherenkov) gt Ne(ionization)
22CsI Photo-cathode
- Nickel and Gold are plated on to Copper, before
CsI evaporation - prevent CsI Cu chemical reaction
- Development of Al-GEM
- tried a few times
- no success so far (spring of 2007)
23Additional Complications
- Absorption of UV photons ( 120 200 nm) by
oxygen and water - oxygen lt 10 ppm water lt 15ppm for transmission
of more than 95 for L 36 cm - Care for deliquescence of CsI
- water contamination in radiator gas
- handling procedure of GEM setup
- reserve of CsI
24QE Measurement of CsI
- Reasonable QE(l) obtained by Y. Aramaki
Cut off CO2 7.2 eV CH4 8.5 eV CF4 11.5
eV
25Understanding Characteristics and Performance of
GEM
- Y. Yamagachi 2004 2006
- long-term gain variation
- p/T dependence
- thick GEM
- simulation
- S. Maki 2005
- ion feedback
- S. Sano 2005 2006
- simulation
26p/T Dependence of Gain
- Electron multiplication in gas
- a function of E/p, or more precisely E/n
ER(T/p) - M AexpaE/n Aexp(aE/n0)(1 dn) n n0
dn
27Measuring Ion Feedback
Xrays (17keV)
Ion feedback factor F Ic/Ia
chamber
ArCH4
50mm
Mesh Current
Shield
- What to measure
- pad current Ia
- mesh current Ic
- Parameters
- VGEMvoltage applied to each GEM (V)
- Edelectric field in the drift region (kV/cm)
- Etelectric field in the trasfer region (kV/cm)
- number of GEMs1,2 or 3
Ic
3mm
HV1
Mesh(cathode)
drift region
3mm
Ed
HV2
GEM3
2mm
GEM2
2mm
R
GEM1
Pad(anode)
2mm
Pad Current
HV1ltHV2
Ia
Typical values HV1-2200V, HV2-2100V,VGEM 350V
28Experimental Configurations
- Et and Ei changes together with VGEM.
- Measure F as functions ofVGEM, Ed, and Et/Ei
29Dependence of Ia and Ic onVGEM
Ed 0.33(kV/cm)
Gain is 700 (Triple) at VGEM 320V
- Both Ia and Ic increase exponentially with VGEM
30Dependence of F on VGEM
Ed 0.33(kV/cm)
- F decreases with increase of VGEM
- F for triple-GEM is large compared to single- and
double-GEM - At large VGEM, F value for triple-GEM approaches
those of single- and double-GEM
31Dependence of F on Ed
VGEM 320(V)
- F increases with increase of Ed
- Ion feedback is less than 5 with small Ed
- Evaluation is needed for performance at low Ed
- Pad current Ia is constant, while mesh current Ic
is changing with Ed
32Making it Thicker
- Motivation
- Larger gain compared to using multiple thin-GEMs
for the same voltage per GEM thickness - Smaller diffusion compared to the multiple-GEMs
- diffusion in the transfer region between the GEMs
- Electric field along the center of a GEM hole
- 150mm-GEM VGEM750V
- 100mm-GEM VGEM500V
- Standard-GEM (50mm) VGEM250V
33Making of 150mm-GEM
- Structure of 150mm-GEM
- Cu(8 mm) LCP(150 mm) Cu(8 mm)
- hole pitch 140 mm, f 70 mm
- Large gain as expected
- Sparks at low voltage
- investigation is under way
- LCP? Overhung?
- limit for charge density?
- On thick-GEM, Toru Tamagawas talk in this
afternoon
34Summary and Outlook
- GEM development at CNS in the last 5 years was
summed up - motivation
- making GEM
- RD for applications TPC and HBD
- Basic characteristics
- long term gain variation, p/T dependence, ion
feedback - making it thicker
- Development in near future
- Gain variation vs material choice and hole shape
- Improvement of thick-GEM performance
- Coarse-grained 2D readout (12mm pixel)