Transcript Document
TITLE FUNDAMENTS - 1 PRINCIPLES OF GAS DETECTORS Fabio Sauli TERA Foundation CERN CH-1211 Geneva Switzerland Part 1: Fundaments Part 2: Detectors [email protected] http://fabio.home.cern.ch/fabio/ http://gdd.web.cern.ch/GDD/ F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 BASIC BIBLIOGRAPHY FUNDAMENTS - 2 D.H. Wilkinson: Ionization Chambers and Counters (Cambridge Univ. Press, 1950) S.A. Korff: Electron and Nuclear Counters (Van Nostrand, 1955) P. Rice-Evans: Spark, Streamer, Proportional and Drift Chambers (Richelieu, 1974) F. Sauli: Principles of Operation of Multiwire Proportional and Drift Chambers (CERN 77-09, 1977) Th. Ferbel, Editor: Techniques and Concepts of High-energy Physics (Plenum, 1983) R.C. Fernow: Introduction to Experimental Particle Physics (Cambridge Univ. Press, 1986) W.R. Leo: Techniques for Nuclear and Particle Physics Experiments (Springer, 1987) C. Fabjan and J. Pilcher, ed.: Instrumentation in Elementary Particle Physics (World Scientific, 1988) C.F.G. Delaney and E.C. Finch: Radiation Detectors (Clarendon Press, 1992) R. Gilmore: Single Particle Detection and Measurement (Taylor and Francis, 1992) F. Sauli, ed.: Instrumentation in High Energy Physics (World Scientific, 1992) K. Grupen: Particle Detectors (Cambridge Monographs on Part. Phys. 1996) K. Kleinknecht: Detectors for Particle Radiation (Cambridge Univ. Press 1998) G.F. Knoll: Radiation Detection and Measurements, 3d Ed. (Wiley, 2000) W. Blum, W. Riegler and L. Rolandi: Particle Detection with Drift Chambers, 2d Ed. (Springer 2008) F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 ENERGY LOSS FUNDAMENTS - 3 DIFFERENTIAL ENERGY LOSS OF CHARGED PARTICES (Z=1) IN MATERIALS: Expressed in MeV g-1 cm2, the differential energy loss is equal within a factor of two for all materials (except H2): (g cm 2 ) (g cm 3 ) l(cm) dE 1 dE d dx : density dE ~ 1.5 MeV g 1 cm2 d SEE: Review of Particle Physics Physics Letters B 667(2008)1-1340 http://pdgLive.lbl.gov F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF GASES FUNDAMENTS - 4 DIFFERENTIAL ENERGY LOSS, PRIMARY AND TOTAL IONIZATION FOR MINIMUM IONIZING, Z=1 PARTICLES NORMAL TEMPERATURE AND PRESSURE (NTP: 20°C, 1 ATMOSPHERE) GAS Ne Ar Xe CH4 C2H6 i-C4H10 CO2 CF4 Density g cm-2 0.839 10-3 1.66 10-3 5.495 10-3 0.667 10-3 1.26 2.49 10-3 1.84 10-3 3.78 10-3 EX eV 16.7 11.6 8.4 8.8 8.2 7 10 EI eV 21.6 15.7 12.1 12.6 11.5 10.6 13.8 16 WI eV 30 25 22 30 26 26 34 54 dE/dx keV cm-1 1.45 2.65 6.87 1.61 2.91 5.67 3.35 6.38 NP cm-1 13 25 41 37 48 90 35 63 NT cm-1 50 106 312 54 112 220 100 120 Z : atomic number ; A : atomic mass; : density Ex, Ei : first excitation and ionization potentials wi: average energy per ion pair nP , nT : primary and total ion pairs per cm (From various sources) F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 PRIMARY IONIZATION FUNDAMENTS - 5 ELECTRON-ION PAIR PRODUCTION Coulomb interactions between the electric field of the particle and of the molecules of the medium produce electron-ion pairs. Multiple ionizing collisions follow Poisson’s statistics: n k n P e k! n k Detection efficiency: n: average k: actual number 1 P0n 1 en Minimum ionizing particles in argon NTP (nP: 25 cm-1) s (mm) (%) 1 91.8 2 99.3 Distribution of the electron closest to an electrode: A1n (x) nenx A1n (t) nenwt w: drift velocity (~ 5 cm µs-1) Limit in time resolution of proportional counters: arrival at anode wire of the closest electron. F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 SECONDARY AND TOTAL IONIZATION FUNDAMENTS - 6 CLUSTER SIZE PROBABILITY IN ARGON Primary electrons can further ionize the medium producing local electronion clusters. Occasionally, the primary electron has enough energy to produce a long trail (delta electron). Total number of ion pairs: nT E E: energy loss wi wi : average energy per ion pair The average ionization energy is about the same in all gases energy and type of particles. and does not depend from For minimum ionizing particles in Argon: E = 2.4 keV/cm wi = 26 eV nT ≈ 90 ion pairs/cm nT 3 nP H. Fischle et al, Nucl. Instr. and Meth. A301 (1991) 202 F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 ELECTRONS RANGE IN MATERIALS FUNDAMENTS - 7 Due to multiple scattering and ionizing collisions, the penetration of electrons in materials is shorter than the integrated range along the path; the practical range is the extrapolated thickness of material absorbing all the electrons. Practical range Integrated path Fit to experimental data (light elements): r = 10 E R r 1.7 r : practical range in µg cm-2 E : electron energy in keV R : range in cm : density in µg cm-3 H. Kanter, Phys. Rev. 121(1961)461 F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 APPROXIMATE EXPRESSION FOR ELECTRON RANGE FUNDAMENTS - 8 PRACTICAL ELECTRON RANGE IN GASES AT NTP A 2 keV delta electron in argon STP has a practical range of ~ 200 µm. The asymmetry in released charge affects the localization accuracy in detectors exploiting the measurement of the center of gravity (Time projection Chambers): 180 µm REAL COG 2 keV F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 FUNDAMENTS - 9 HEED CALCULATION OF PRIMARY IONIZATION AND ELECTRON RANGE PRIMARY CLUSTERS PER cm (STP): ELECTRON RANGE IN ARGON (STP): HEED 2 keV 140 µm I. B. Smirnov, Nucl. Instr. and Meth. A554(2005)474 HEED: http://consult.cern.ch/writeup/heed/ F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 IONIZATION STASTISTICS - 1 FUNDAMENTS - 10 WIDE ENERGY LOSS SPREAD (LANDAU DISTRIBUTION) The statistics of the energy loss, with wide fluctuations and a long tail (due to delta electrons) requires statistical analysis of hundreds of samples for determination of the average (as done in Time Projection Chambers) I. B. Smirnov, Nucl. Instr. and Meth. A554(2005)474 F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 IONIZATION STATISTICS - 2 FUNDAMENTS - 11 The presence of long range delta electrons can substantially affect the localization accuracy: DRIFT Coordinate deduced from drift time: ~5% CENTER OF GRAVITY Coordinate from cathode induced charge F. Sauli, Nucl. Instr. and Meth. 156 (1978) 147 G. Charpak et al, Nucl. Instr. and Meth. 167 (1979) 455 F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 ELECTRONS DRIFT AND DIFFUSION FUNDAMENTS - 12 Drift velocity and diffusion of electrons vary in a wide range, depending the gas mixture: 2k x x e E k : characteristic energy x: drift distance E: electric field x Thermal limit: The diffusion at equal E/P depends on the inverse square root of pressure: DRIFT VELOCITY: x 2 KT x e E 2k e P E x P DIFFUSION: 1.5 mm 250 µm F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 TRANSPORT THEORY OF ELECTRON DRIFT FUNDAMENTS - 13 Charge transport processes are determined by electron-molecule cross sections: MAGBOLTZ: Montecarlo program to compute electron drift and diffusion S. Biagi, Nucl. Instr. and Meth. A421(1999)234 http://rjd.web.cern.ch/rjd/cgi-bin/cross F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 MIXTURES FUNDAMENTS - 14 Addition to a noble gas of even small percentages of a molecular gas has dominant effect on the electron cross section: CO2 100 Ar 100 CO210 CO2 2 F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 DRIFT VELOCITY FUNDAMENTS - 15 ELECTRON DRIFT VELOCITY IN ARGON-METHANE MIXTURES: (Computed with MAGBOLTZ) F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 FUNDAMENTS - 16 LONGITUDINAL AND TRANSVERSE DIFFUSION At low electric fields, the diffusion is symmetric. At moderate to high fields however the longitudinal diffusion (in the direction of drift) is reduced. TRANSVERSE DIFFUSION: T E Field L Drift LONGITUDINAL DIFFUSION: In drift chambers, the dispersive factor is the longitudinal diffusion (measured time in the direction of the electric field) In time projection chambers, the dispersive factor is the transverse diffusion (center of gravity of charge induced on pad rows) F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 MAGNETIC FIELD FUNDAMENTS - 17 B The drifting electrons swarm is rotated by an angle B in the plane perpendicular to E and B; the magnetic drift velocity is wB ≤ w0 r r E B E tan B B wB E wB r r E B L 0 T w : mean collision time wB w0 s w L B r B E B 1 2 2 eB / m Larmor frequency s T E EB wB 0 1 2 2 e ExB 2 2 B(E B) E m 1 2 2 B B 2 Drift velocity unchanged The transverse diffusion is reduced Friction force theory F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 TRANSVERSE DIFFUSION IN MAGNETIC FIELD FUNDAMENTS - 18 IN SOME GASES THE TRANSVERSE DIFFUSION IS STRONGLY REDUCED Improves the precision of the projected coordinate measurement in Time Projection Chambers r r E B 200 V/cm 600 µm 50 µm F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 ELECTRON ATTACHMENT FUNDAMENTS - 19 Electrons are lost by radiative or non-radiative capture to resulting in the formation of negative ions: e + a -> A- (+h). The attachment cross section is gas and energy-dependent, therefore strongly depends on the gas composition and electric field. For equal amount of oxygen contamination, capture losses are much more severe in “cold” gases. In the example, a 5% loss is observed for 20 cm drift for 15 ppm of oxygen in A-CO2 or 800 ppm in Ar-CH4. ELECTRONS SURVIVING AFTER 20 CM DRIFT (E = 200 V/cm): OXYGEN ATTACHMENT COEFFICIENT: F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 EXCITATION AND CHARGE MULTIPLICATION FUNDAMENTS - 20 Electrons on the high side of the energy distribution reach the excitation and ionization levels, inducing inelastic collisions. CROSS SECTIONS AT HIGH ELECTRIC FIELDS: ELECTRONS ENERGY DISTRIBUTION IN ARGON AT INCREASING FIELDS: Ex=10.6 eV Ei=15.7 eV EXCITATION 11.6 eV IONIZATION 15.7 eV F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 INELASTIC COLLISION PROCESSES IN MIXTURES FUNDAMENTS - 21 Radiative processes with the emission of a short wavelength photon can induce various kinds of secondary effects, as internal reconversion to charge on of molecules with low ionization potential or emission of photoelectron at cathodes. Addition to noble gases of molecular additives reduce these effects directly, quenching the emissions, or by absorption. MAJOR PROCESSES: Radiative recombination: Radiative capture: Dissociative capture: Three-body collision: Excimer formation and decay: Penning effect: A++ B -> AB + h J.Meek and J. D. Cragg, Electrical e + M -> M + h Breakdown of Gases (Clarendon, 1953) e + AB -> AB -> A + B e + A = B -> A- + B A* + A -> A*2 -> A + A + h A*+ B -> A + B* + e [Ei(B) < Ex(A)] F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 PHOTON EMISSION SPECTRA IN NOBLE GASES FUNDAMENTS - 22 The emission spectra after excitation and dimers formation of noble gases are peaked in the far ultraviolet. The low ionization potential vapors used in Cherenkov ring imaging detectors, as Triethylamine (TEA) and Tetrakis-dimethylamino ethylene (TMAE), added to noble gases, act as internal wavelength shifters and result in the emission of photons at longer wavelengths: Relative light yield 15 1.0 10 0.8 5 Kr 4 3 Energy (eV ) 2 TEA TMAE 0.6 Ar 0.4 Xe 0.2 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 W avelength (nm) IMAGING CHAMBERS SCINTILLATING PROPORTIONAL COUNTERS F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 COLLISIONAL IONIZATION: TOWNSEND COEFFICIENT FUNDAMENTS - 23 Electrons acquiring enough energy from the field can have ionizing collisions with molecules, resulting in with creation of an electron-ion pair. Mean free path for ionization: First Townsend coefficient: 1 1 N N: molecules/cm3 Ionizing collisions/cm TOWNSEND COEFFICIENT FOR NOBLE GASES: TOWNSEND COEFFICIENT FOR Ar-CH4: (MAGBOLTZ) F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 AVALANCHE MULTIPLICATION IN UNIFORM FIELD E FUNDAMENTS - 24 VISUALIZATION OF AVALANCHES COMBINING A CLOUD CHAMBER WITH AN AVALANCHE CHAMBER: l x Ions Electrons At each mean free path for ionization, electrons create an electron-ion pair; results an exponential increase of charge, with fast electrons on the front and slow ions left behind. Incremental increase of the number of electrons in the avalanche: n(x) n0e x dn n dx Multiplication factor or Gain: n x M(x) e n0 Maximum Avalanche size before discharge (Raether limit): QMAX ≈ 107 e H. Raether, Electron Avalanches and Breakdown in Gases (Butterworth 1964) F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 SIGNAL INDUCTION ON ELECTRODES FUNDAMENTS - 25 The multiplying and moving charges in the avalanche induce signals on the electrodes. The incremental charge induction due to electrons after a path s: dq en0es ds s0 Integrating over s: en0 s en0 s en0 wt q (s) (e 1) e e s0 s0 s0 and the corresponding current : dq en0 w w t en0 w t i (t) e e dt s0 T The current signal induced by ions is given by: en0 wt w*t 0 t T i (t ) e e 1 1 T * w en0 s w* t i (t ) e e T t T T w Fast electron signal 1 w Slow ion tail J. Townsend, Electrons in Gases (Hutchinson 1947) F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 AVALANCHE STATISTICS IN UNIFORM FIELDS FUNDAMENTS - 26 In constant electric field, the probability of an avalanche started by a single electron to have a size N is given by Furry’s law: N 1 N P(N) e N SIZE DISTRIBUTIONS FOR AVALANCHES STARTED BY 1, 2,... 10 ELECTRONS: N e s : average multiplication factor on the gap s The maximum probability is for N=0 (no multiplication!). N P ,n N The Furry distribution has a variance equal to the average: N N 1 For an avalanche started by n electrons: N P(n, N ) N n1 N N N N e (n 1)! H. Genz, Nucl. Instr. and Meth. 112(1973)83 F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 AVALANCHE SIZE DISTRIBUTION At large gains (high fields) the avalanche distribution is described by a Polya function: (k 1) k1 k (k1)z z N P(z) z e N (k 1) for k integer FUNDAMENTS - 27 AVALANCHE SIZE DISTRIBUTIONS AT INCREASING FIELDS: POLYA DISTRIBUTIONS: (k 1) (k)! of the Polya The relative variance distribution is: 2 N 1 1 1 bb N N 1 k N For k=0 the distributions reduce to a Furry law. • The shape of the single electron avalanche distribution has a major relevance in determining the energy resolution of proportional counters • A peaked single electron pulse height distribution provides efficient detection (RICH) H. Sclumbohm, Zeit. Physik 151(1958)563 F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 PROPORTIONAL COUNTER FUNDAMENTS - 28 Thin anode wire of radius a, coaxial with a cylindrical cathode of radius b Potential: C 2 0 ln b a CV0 1 2 0 r CV0 r V (r) ln 20 a E(r) V (b) V0 capacitance per unit length AVALANCHE REGION V(a) 0 ELECTRIC FIELD Electric field: DRIFT AND COLLECTION REGION Cathode radius b THRESHOLD FIELD FOR MULTIPLICATION Anode radius a a DISTANCE FROM CENTER F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 PROPORTIONAL COUNTER: AVALANCHE DEVELOPMENT Electrons approach the anode; on reaching a critical value of field strength, they start an avalanche multiplication, continuing until the front reaches the wire. Ions are left behind in a characteristic drop shape. The extent by which the avalanche surrounds the wire depends on gas, geometry and gain. + + - + ln M GAIN CHARACTERISTICS: At increasing fields, to a region of charge collection (ionization chamber) follows a region of multiplication with the detected charge proportional to the initial ionization. At higher voltage follow a region of limited proportionality, saturation (with the output charge independent from initial ionization), streamer formation and breakdown. + + - + FUNDAMENTS - 29 + + + Streamer Breakdown Saturation Multiplication Collection Attachment n1 n2 IONIZATION PROPORTIONAL CHAMBER COUNTER Voltage F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 PROPORTIONAL COUNTERS: INDUCED SIGNALS FUNDAMENTS - 30 For an avalanche starting at a small distance from the anode, the electron and ion contributions to the induced charge are: INDUCED CHARGE: a Q dV QC a q dr ln q(t) V0 a dr 20 a q Q b dV QC b dr ln V0 a dr 20 a Total induced signal on anode: QC b q q q ln Q 20 a Q (+Q on cathode) Ratio of electron and ion signals: q ln( a ) ln a ~1% for typical geometry ln b ln( a ) q Time development of the signal on anode: 0 100 300 400 500 t (µs) T+ FAST SIGNAL DIFFERENTIATION: 50 ns q(t) 100 ns QC CV0 QC t q(t ) ln 1 t ln 1 2 20 20a 20 t 0 Total ions drift time: 0 (b2 a2 ) T q(T ) Q CV0 200 300 ns t(ns) 0 100 200 300 400 500 F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 PROPORTIONAL COUNTERS: ENERGY RESOLUTION FUNDAMENTS - 31 The energy resolution is a convolution of ionization statistics, avalanche spread and electronics noise: E N M el E N M M 2 2 For soft X-rays: 2 N2 FN Gain variance: M 2 1 A 2 M N A A A F: Fano factor Single electron avalanche variance for a Polya avalanche distribution 2 E 1 (F b) E N GAS Ar Ar-CH4 RESOLUTION % 2 A A F(exp) 0.17 0.19 0.17 0.19 Xe AVALANCHE NOISE b F(calc) TOTAL IONIZATION GAIN PULSE HEIGHT SPECTRUM FOR 5.9 keV X-RAYS IN P10 (Ar-CH4 90-10): 1.3 0.22 fwhm E 9% 5.9 E <0.17 Ne+0.5%Ar 0.05 fwhm 1.3 keV For 5.9 keV X-rays (N~220): E E 7% for b=1 F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 SCINTILLATING PROPORTIONAL COUNTERS FUNDAMENTS - 32 In noble gases, at moderate electric fields before multiplication, there is a large emission of scintillation photons. In proportional scintillation counters the detection of these photons eliminate the dispersion due to the avalanches and achieve the best energy resolution (close to the statistical) E 2 F E N CHARGE AND LIGHT YIELD VS VOLTAGE: SPHERICAL ANODE COUNTER: Xe 99.95% 1030 torr CHARGE LIGHT A.J.P.L. Policarpo et al, Nucl. Instr. and Meth. 102(1972)337 F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 ENERGY RESOLUTION OF SCINTILLATION COUNTERS 55Fe FWHM E 8.5% 3.6% E E X-RAYS (5.898 keV): R Xe 99.95% 1030 torr Primary statistics limit: E E 241Am FWHM 500 eV FUNDAMENTS - 33 F 2.8% N ENERGY SPECTRUM: A.J.P.L. Policarpo et al, Nucl. Instr. and Meth. 102(1972)337 H. E. Palmer, IEEE Trans. Nucl. Sci.NS-22(1975)100 Fluorescence analysis X-Ray Spectroscopy F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 IMAGING CHAMBERS The light emission in avalanches has been exploited to detect tracks with simple optical recorders (solid state cameras). FUNDAMENTS - 34 COSMIC RAY ACTIVITY IN A 10x10x10 cm3 SENSITIVE VOLUME: The UV light emission in the avalanches is converted into the visible using an internal wavelength shifter (TMAE gas) or a thin WLS on the semi-transparent anode. DRIFT VOLUME AVALANCHE MULTIPLICATION M. Suzuki et al, Nucl. Instr. and Meth. A263(1988)237 F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009 3-D OPTICAL IMAGING CHAMBER FUNDAMENTS - 35 IMAGES OF NUCLEAR DECAYS: Optical imaging chamber with recording of the projected image using a CCD camera, and the time profile of the emitted light with a photomultiplier. Simultaneous recording of projection and time development of the emission permits a 3-D reconstruction of tracks. Tested with radioactive ion beams stopping in the gas volume. K. Miernik et al, Nucl. Instr. and Meth. A581(2007)194 F. Sauli - Gas Detectors - KEK March 14, 2009