1 / 12

Advanced Extruded Scintillator R&D

Advanced Extruded Scintillator R&D. Alan Bross. Context. The extruded scintillator R&D Program started at Fermilab about 14 years ago Primary Goal reduce cost using Industrial Techniques for production – Extrusion Advantages Use commercial polystyrene Manufacture almost any shape

ranae
Télécharger la présentation

Advanced Extruded Scintillator R&D

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. Advanced Extruded Scintillator R&D Alan Bross

  2. Context • The extruded scintillator R&D Program started at Fermilab about 14 years ago • Primary Goal reduce cost using Industrial Techniques for production – Extrusion • Advantages • Use commercial polystyrene • Manufacture almost any shape • Very-High production rates possible • LOW COST • Disadvantage • Poorer optical quality • Requires WLS fiber readout • Original work utilized extrusion equipment at outside vendor • Their facilities/production techniques certainly not optimized for high-quality scintillator production Alan Bross ANL-UChicago-FNAL CM4 June 26, 2008

  3. FNAL-NICADD Extrusion Facility State-of-the-Art Optimized for Scintillator Fully automated Alan Bross ANL-UChicago-FNAL CM4 June 26, 2008

  4. POLYMER FEEDER DOPANT FEEDER POLYMER DRYER MELT PUMP EXTRUDER DIE CONVEYOR FNAL-NICADD EXTRUSION FACILITY • In-line continuous process: • Less handling of raw materials • Precise metering of feeders • Twin-screw extruder (better mixing) • Melt pump offers steady output • Control instrumentation Alan Bross ANL-UChicago-FNAL CM4 June 26, 2008

  5. Projects • D0 preshower detectors • MINOS • SciBar – K2K/SciBoone • Star • Mayan Pyramid Mapping • UT-Austin Alan Bross ANL-UChicago-FNAL CM4 June 26, 2008

  6. Projects II • Hall B – JLAB • Minerva • T2K – ND280 • Rochester • Lancaster • Kyoto (Ingrid) • Double-Chooz • Amiga – Pierre Auger Alan Bross ANL-UChicago-FNAL CM4 June 26, 2008

  7. Next step in R&D • Potential Process Modifications • Run multiple threads • Maximizes throughput of machine • Minimizes linear speed of extrusion part exiting die • Stability/Cooling issues • Co-extrude Kuraray fiber with the scintillator profile • Reduce handling of WLS • Fiber Co-extrusion • Prototyped with outside vendor some 8 years ago • Post-clad Kuraray fiber • Polyethylene • Kynar • Teflon • No degradation of fiber seen (but thin (100-300 mm) coatings • WLS fiber did see large heat excursion, however Alan Bross ANL-UChicago-FNAL CM4 June 26, 2008

  8. Proposal • Develop Co-Extrusion Die Tooling with ISO-9000 qualified Vendor - Guill Tool • They have experience with this type of die • Have developed tooling for co-extrusion applications that involve polymers with different melt characteristics which required pre-cooling of one or more of the components in the extrusion • Melt temperature for scintillator extrusions above the glass transition of the fiber • Much larger heat soak than in our previous tests Alan Bross ANL-UChicago-FNAL CM4 June 26, 2008

  9. Potential Benefits Extruded scintillator Profiles Readout with WLS Fiber • Advantages of co-extrusion • Almost no fiber handling yielding significant manpower cost reduction • Almost perfect scintillator-fiber optical coupling • Greater uniformity with respect to light coupling between the scintillator and WLS fiber • Benefits of UC-Fermilab Collaboration • Students and/or postdocs working on the R&D at the facility • Note: Since the demise of the Fermilab student COOP program, we have not had students (other than summer) working in the facility • R&D nature of the facility will be reinvigorated • Has become production-only facility in recent years • Will improve the prospects for technical advances yielding a more powerful/cost-effective detector technology • Allow us to Better serve user base Alan Bross ANL-UChicago-FNAL CM4 June 26, 2008

  10. 150 m 15 m 15 m 1.5 cm 15 m 3 cm Magnetized Fine-Resolution Totally Active Segmented Detector Simulation of a Totally Active Scintillating Detector (TASD) using Nona and Minerna concepts with Geant4 • 3333 Modules (X and Y plane) • Each plane contains 1000 slabs • Total: 6.7M channels • Momenta between 100 MeV/c to 15 GeV/c • Magnetic field considered: 0.5 T • Reconstructed position resolution ~ 4.5 mm B = 0.5T Alan Bross ANL-UChicago-FNAL CM4 June 26, 2008

  11. Magnet • New Idea • VLHC SC Transmission Line • Technically proven • Might actually be affordable 1 m iron wall thickness. ~2.4 T peak field in the iron. Good field uniformity Alan Bross ANL-UChicago-FNAL CM4 June 26, 2008

  12. TASD Performance II • Excellent Momentum resolution (2-4%) • Think Big(ger) • Nucleon Decay P -> p+p0 Alan Bross ANL-UChicago-FNAL CM4 June 26, 2008

More Related