Nov 18 – 22, 2024
America/New_York timezone

A Micromachined Radiation-Resistant Dense High Rate Calorimeter Sensor Prototype Using Secondary Emission

Nov 20, 2024, 11:45 AM
15m
262C (Student Union)

262C

Student Union

Parallel Presentation RDC9: Calorimetry RDC 09 - Calorimetry Parallel Session

Speaker

Prof. David Winn (Fairfield University)

Description

A Micromachined Radiation-Resistant Dense High Rate Calorimeter Sensor Prototype Using Secondary Emission

Burak Bilki3, Jace Beavers2,4, Daniel Cronin1, Aliko Mestvirishili3, Yasar Onel3, Christopher Sanzeni2, Elie Track2, James Wetzel3, David R Winn1,2,*

  1. Fairfield University, 2. nVizix LLC, 3. University of Iowa, 4. Los Alamos National Lab
  2. Corresponding Author: winn@fairfield.edu

We present a prototype of a 20 stage stack assembly 3.8 cm diameter active area x 2.6 cm deep stack of proximity-focused micromachined 0.65 mm thick CuBe(1%) sheets serving as dynode-like secondary emission sensors, separated by a drift distance of 0.6 mm between sheets by ceramic spacers. The stack has a density of ~25-30% of the density of CuBe. Baseline operation is in a modest vacuum ~10^-4 Torr, 4-5 orders of magnitude higher than that needed in cesiated PMT, with the stack voltages provided by in-vacuum wire wound high vacuum resistor chain. A full COMSOL simulation using custom secondary emission subroutines is in reasonable agreement with the device tested. We discuss tests with gamma, beta and neutron sources, cosmic muons and 100 GeV pion MIPs. The pulse risetime is <10ns, and gain is ~few x 10^5. At -4,400 V in a ~0.3T B-field from a bar magnet at orthogonal directions, the response was < 2% changed. We posit that full scale MEMs stack calorimeter tests may demonstrate that the response to the low energy components (neutron knock-ons, ion fragments, spallation) at low incident kinetic energies in hadronic showers will result in enhanced signals, since the secondary emission yield follows dE/dx. For charged particle velocities beta~0.03 the yield is ~200x to that of MIPs at beta~1. This enhancement may compensate hadronic energy resolution effects that are lost in scintillators in part due to Fano factor suppression in high dE/dx low energy ion fragments, and de-emphasize the response to e-m components. We discuss prospects for using tungsten and other dense metal micromachined sheet dynodes.

Primary authors

Prof. Burak Bilki (U. Iowa) Mr Daniel Cronin (Fairfield U.)

Co-author

Prof. Yasar Onel (U.Iowa)

Presentation materials