Title: Development of Liquid Nitrogen Time Projection Chambers
1Development of Liquid Nitrogen Time Projection
Chambers A. Ereditato, M. Hess, S. Janos, I.
Kreslo, S. Lehmann, M. Messina, U. Moser, B.
Rossi, H.-U. Schütz, M. Zeller Presented by
Igor E. Kreslo, Ph.D. LHEP, University of Bern
2Multi-energy X-ray cargo radiography can still
something be hidden?
Sensitive to Metal objects High density
objects Characteristic shapes
Not very sensitive to Specific chemical
composition 2D shaped objects (sheet explosives)
3Gamma Nuclear Resonant Absorption method of
Nitrogen detection (Soreq NRC, 1985)
9.17 MeV ?
1.5 MeV
14N
13C
p
4Gamma Nuclear Resonant Absorption method of
Nitrogen detection (Proposed by Soreq NRC to US
FAA in 1985)
Detector
Intensity
Non-Resonant ?
Resonant ?
14N
13C
p
14N
e-
N content
e-
Sorec National Research Center, Yavne, 81800,
Israel
5Detector for GRNA radiography
High spatial resolution (order of 1 mm or
better) Large active volume High density High
Nitrogen content
TPC on liquid Noble gases (LAr, LXe) LNitrogen ?
6Ionisation signals in Liquid Argon - Nitrogen
Plans and Perspectives
7Charge transport in Liquid Argon - Nitrogen
8Electron mobility in Liquid Argon - Nitrogen
Detector scheme
9LAR TPC prototype
Mixture LAr-LN is prepared directly in the
cryostat. The content of Nitrogen is monitored by
density sensor. ?LAr 1.4 g/cm3 ?LN 0.8
g/cm3 Density sensor
Floater
C f(?)
10LAR TPC prototype
Wire pitch 2 mm
HV power supply 0-30kV
100 x 100 mm
To preamp
8mm
11LAr TPC prototype
Argon used Carbagas 1, Commercial grade 48 (
lt 210-7 impurities concentration)
Nitrogen used Carbagas, Commercial grade 50
( lt 10-7 impurities concentration) No
additional purification is done for the first
tests.
1 Carbagas, Hofgut, 3073 Gumligen , Switzerland
12LAR TPC prototype and performance
Detector readout, amplifier, DAQ
CAEN V1724 VME 8xADC
Shaping Q-integrating preamplifier, 25 mV/fC
Wire chamber
13LAR TPC prototype and performance
Muon
0-30 kV
14LAR TPC prototype and performance
Cosmic Muon Tracks recorded
5 mm drift
15LAr TPC prototype and performance
TPC response to a primary ionization
Recombination losses q0AQ0
Primary ionisation Q0
Attachment losses qq0e -(D/?)
Particle
E
collection wires
I-
Ar e-
I-
I-
Ar e-
e-
D, drift distance
16LAR TPC prototype and performance
TPC response to a Compton electrons - simulation
Losses during the charge drift affect the shape
of the spectrum, but not the end point ! End
point can be used to measure recombination.
17LAR TPC prototype and performance
TPC response to Compton electrons from 60Co (1.17
and 1.33 MeV gammas) (measured data)
18LAR TPC prototype and performance
60Co (1.17 and 1.33 MeV gammas)
Box model
19LARN TPC prototype and performance
60Co (1.17 and 1.33 MeV gammas)
Recombination vs Nitrogen content (vol. )
A1
20LARN TPC prototype and performance
Recombination vs Nitrogen content, (vol. )
A0.5
A1
21LARN TPC prototype and performance
Recombination vs Nitrogen content, (vol. )
A0.5
Similar effect was observed by D.W. Swan in
1963, with about 0.6 vol. of LN ( for
reference see slide 7) but not explained !
A1
22LARN TPC prototype and performance
Box model parameters evolution with LN content
(vol. )
23LARN TPC first test conclusions
-
- First prototype TPC with Liquid Argon-Nitrogen
mixture operates well in Bern. - Collected charge at 8 mm drift and 6 vol. of
Nitrogen is sufficient to see MIPs and 1 MeV
electrons (signal / noise gt10). - At 6 of Nitrogen such TPC is already more
efficient for GRNA, than liquid scintillator
detectors. - Further study on recombination mechanisms in
LAr-N is needed. - The technology is very promising for security
applications !
24LARN TPC Plans and Perspectives
- More detailed study on recombination vs Nitrogen
content with non-resonant gammas. - Study of charge attachment cross-section vs
Nitrogen content. - 3. Proton - electron separation study
(simulation) - 4. Tests with resonant gammas on a proton
accelerator. - 5. Optimization of the detector geometry for
GRNA scenario. - 6. Contacts with industry - building a cargo
screener prototype