1 / 20

MINERvA Director Review

MINERvA Director Review. Optical Cables and Scintillator Extrusions. WLS (wavelength shifting) fibers in scintillator Extruded triangular scintillator pieces 3.3cm by 1.7 cm ID - Active Target - triangular scintillators form a layer (128 triangles/layer)

nat
Télécharger la présentation

MINERvA Director Review

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MINERvA Director Review Optical Cables and Scintillator Extrusions

  2. WLS (wavelength shifting) fibers in scintillator Extruded triangular scintillator pieces 3.3cm by 1.7 cm ID - Active Target - triangular scintillators form a layer (128 triangles/layer) Light sharing between adjacent strips gives position measurement Extruded square scintillator pieces – 1.9 cm square OD - Side hadron calorimeter - 6 layers Active detector elements

  3. Active Detector Elements • WLS fiber – 1.2 mm, 175 ppm, s-35 multi-clad Kuraray fiber • Same kind of fiber used CMS HCAL and CDF Preshower • Slightly less flexible than the most flexible Kuraray fiber • With attenuation length of more transparent fiber • Readout one end – mirror the other end • Longest WLS fiber length – 3.5 m • Clear fiber in optical cables takes light to PMT box • 1.2 mm s-35 Kuraray multi-clad fiber • Length about 1.2 m OD -1.4 m ID

  4. Active Detector Elements • PMT Box • Brings light from clear fiber cable to multi-channel PMT • The piece which consists of the optical connector and clear fibers we call the ODU (optical decoder unit) • Cable end connects to the clear cable • Fiber end glued to PMT cookie

  5. DDK Optical Connectors and Cables Clip Box Ferrule • 3 Parts Ferrule, box, and clip – uses clip instead of pins and screws • Designed by DDK (now Fujikura) in conjunction with the CDF Plug Upgrade • RMS of light transmission - 1% to 2% (connection – reconnection) • For CDF – holes for 0.83 mm, 0.9mm, and 1.0 mm fiber • Also used by FOCUS, D0, and STAR experiments • We will have DDK design new ferrule for 1.2 mm fiber – same clip and box • Optical Cables – MSU STAR method to make light tight • For light tight - RTV boot on both ends with black tube surrounding the fiber

  6. Physics Requirements • We require enough light to get a position resolution of 3 mm • 8 pe/layer (photo-electron /layer) from Monte Carlo program • Per doublet for a MIP with perpendicular incidence • To determine particle type from dE/dx • 8 pe/layer from Monte Carlo program • The position and dE/dx determination should be measured directly rather than deriving them from the Monte Carlo program with the # pe • Less than a few mm of warping of scintillator in xy direction • Need to know position of scintillators • However, source scanning of layers will give this information

  7. Vertical Slice Test I - # pe • #pe is measured with VST I • First triangular extrusions from Lab 5 - NICADD/FNAL Extruder • However, the hole is oval and slightly oversize • Highest light yield – fiber tight in hole • 0.5 m long and painted with TiO2 • Minerva electronics and MINOS pmt (M64) in MINOS PMT box • 1.2 mm, 3.5 m, mirrored WLS fiber – mirror at scintillator end • Length simulates the worst case • No clear 1 m cable in VST I • must multiply the result by 0.75

  8. VST I • #PE – 1 Layer of triangles • 10 pe – scaling the single pe peak • 12 pe - inefficiency with /10 optical filter in connector • These agree well – average – 11 pe • Scale to 11*0.75(for cable)=8 pe/layer

  9. Near Term Tests • VST II - measure position resolution directly • Jan – Feb 2005 • All parts exists • Use next generation of extrusions • Measure position resolution • Compare light between the 3 layers to show dE/dx resolution • Compare to Monte Carlo program • VST II is this decisive test • Source R & D Tests • Illuminate a separate 5 triangles array with a source • Compare light between different configuration • Compare glue to no glue, etc.

  10. NICADD/FNAL Extruder • Extruded scintillator much cheaper than cast scintillator • Can create unique shapes - MINERvA triangles • FNAL group experienced with extruded scintillator – MINOS, K2K • Extruder is a collaboration between FNAL and NIU, owned by NIU • Computer controlled • Regulate mixture of polystyrene pellets and dopants • Optimize temperature and extrusion speed • The Extruder is the ideal size for MINERvA production

  11. Extruder Dies • Two scintillator shapes – triangle and square • Triangular extrusion is more challenging shape • VST I – first die • Supported by FNAL, NIU, DOE-HEP through Rochester • Re-tune for making triangular extrusions for VST II • Development of new die for square scintillator • Expected to be easier • Co-extruder – coat scintillator extrusion with TiO2 • MINOS scintillator manufactored with coextruder

  12. Quality Controland Production • Production run tolerances for triangular shapes • Hole production and testing

  13. Fiber Procurement • Purchase 57 km of clear fiber – Rochester Task • QC – same procedure as CMS • Use cable testing box to inject light to fibers • Test 5 fibers in batch ( a fiber preform) • QC tests done by Rochester physicist and a Rochester technician • Purchase 119 km of WLS fiber – Rochester Task • QC – Lab 6 automatic fiber scanner, UV lamp and pin diodes • Not working now • Could use manual setup in Muon Lab – source and PMT • Measure 5 fibers from a batch • Mirror fibers in Lab 7 • FNAL contribution budgeted in FNAL impact statement • Lab 7 did this for CDF Plug, FOCUS, STAR ECAL, CMS HCAL, D0 • 3 steps – ice polishing sputtering and protecting the mirror

  14. Connector Procurement and Polishing • DDK will design new ferrule for 1.2 mm fiber – initial QC • Measure initial connectors with Avant Optical Gauge Comparator • Coordinate measuring machine owned by Tech Support • They will measure the position and angle of holes • Measure RMS of the light of initial set of cables • Polishing at Lab 7 • Lab 7 has been polishing connectors for the last 10 years • They have experience polishing these connectors - FOCUS • DDK connectors have fiberglass which dulls the diamonds • New diamonds or relapped diamonds after 40 connector polishes • Lab 7 polishes 10 connectors at a time • FNAL Lab 8 need to build fixture to hold the connectors

  15. Optical Cables and ODU Assembly • ODUs – fibers-connector part used for the PMT box • Like cable, but not made light tight • Cable construction same techniques and CDF and CMS • To make light tight – copy MSU STAR method • Put RTV boot on both ends of cable • Can prototype existing DDK connectors for 1.0 mm fiber • Fiber diameter doesn’t matter for test certain techniques • Test RTV light tight boot • Set up the production line • QC – Build quality control device • Build light injection box – like CMS calibration box • Build box to take light in cables to pin diodes • Multi-channel pico-ammeter system readout out pin diodes

  16. Scintillation Extrusion Schedule • Schedule based on experience from extruder R & D • 2 dies – 2 months of testing the tuning for each die • 90 Days for production • People • 2 FNAL technicians • NIU Production Coordinator – 50% time • NIU Run Supervisor – 50% time • 9 month after June 1 – March 2005

  17. Schedule • WLS Fiber • 3 months to acquire WLS fiber - • 4 months to mirrors fiber – 4 technicians • June 2005 – Dec 2005 • An Fall accelerator shutdown could effect this schedule • Optical Cables and ODUs • 3 months to acquire prototype ferrule • 1 month to test • 1 month acquire production connectors • 1 Rochester R&D Technician – Finish Nov 2005 • 7.5months – 2404 ODUs – Rochester 4 techs – Finish Jun 2005 • 12 months - 4607 Cables – 6 techs - Finish Jun 2006

  18. Cable Costs • As-real eng – as realized and engineering costs estimate • Exp as-real – direct extrapolation from as realized costs • Act as-real – actual as realized costs • Sim/exp as-real – direct/similar extrapolation from as realized costs

  19. Polishing and WLS Fiber Costs

  20. Costs – Scintillator Extrusions

More Related