Download UM PPS Lab Activities HV readout

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Line (geometry) wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
UM PPS Lab Activities
- HV Readout Long Run
- Single Source Saturation Test
PPS meeting April 30, 2012
Waveforms from 1 Run Last Week
4/30/2012
UM PPS Activities
2
HV Readout Long Run Setup
•
•
•
•
•
HV board with 11 lines [90,100] at 815V
7 out of 11 lines with the circuitry to read them out
4 consecutive HV lines 94-97 connected to the DRS
Signal attenuation of 32 dB (40 times on amplitude)
Source sitting on top of the 1 mm slit graphite collimator
aligned over a single HV line (#96)
• DRS threshold very low (60 mV) so that no matter what line
had a pulse, the trigger line fired (Fan-in/Fan-out not OK)
 at the analysis lever a much harder threshold (200 mV)
was used to select real hit-lines
• Trick: DRS channel 3 signals is always smaller so 3230 dB
4/30/2012
UM PPS Activities
3
Number of HV Pulses/Event
125
2
4/30/2012
UM PPS Activities
4
HV Pulses Multiplicity per Channel
Last week result on the left quite different from this long run: now
almost only the closest line has hits, and they have a comparable rate.
Important to check with a larger number of lines (small improvement
the same test with the source on one of the two extreme lines)
4/30/2012
UM PPS Activities
5
HV Pulse Amplitude
The trigger line (#3) has larger amplitude pulses (and #4 smaller)
4/30/2012
UM PPS Activities
6
HV Pulse Rise Time (10%-90%)
4/30/2012
UM PPS Activities
7
HV Pulse Width
4/30/2012
UM PPS Activities
8
HV Pulse Pseudo-Charge=|A|*W
4/30/2012
UM PPS Activities
9
Time Between Events
Why this
structure?
4/30/2012
UM PPS Activities
10
Saturation Test
• Saturation: rate of incoming ionizing particles larger than the
inverse of the pixel recovery time (RHV*Cpixel) limiting the
number of discharges
• PDP geometry fixes Cpixel measured ~10pF, and with HV quench
resistor 200 MΩ RC~ 2ms  max rate O(kHz)
• Sources measured with a Geiger counter after one layer of
glass: (1R=2.58*10-4 C/kg ~2.1*109 ion couples)
–
–
106Ru~130
mR/h ~7 ·104 ions/sec
90Sr~170 mR/h ~ 105 ions/sec
over the entire source area ~1.3 cm2 (pixel ~1.5 mm2)
• Idea: single HV line x 4 RO lines increasing the HV to maximize
the probability of a plasma discharge in the gas. Above a certain
threshold higher voltage should not produce more hits
• Background events/rates are measured without any source and
the data runs are only with 106Ru
4/30/2012
UM PPS Activities
11
Test with R(HV)=200 MΩ
Based on the fit results at R(HV)=200 MΩ with C(pixel)=10 pF 
RC= 2 ms  saturation @ 500 Hz reached at 1900.6 V
4/30/2012
UM PPS Activities
12
Test with R(HV)=1 GΩ
Behavior not very linear. Hint of saturation at HV>930V
(different HV line but same rate as before once RHV=200 MΩ s used)
4/30/2012
UM PPS Activities
13
Extended Test with R(HV)=1 GΩ
The behavior seems more linear (except the first points) and
the hint of saturation at HV>930V has disappeared
4/30/2012
UM PPS Activities
14
Full Test with R(HV)=1 GΩ
Second set of points the day after: no hints of saturation!
Jump of background events more and more important at higher HV
4/30/2012
UM PPS Activities
15
No Saturation. Really?!
The ratio of the data rates with the two RHV values agrees with
the ratio of the maximum rates based on the recovery time 
we were saturated the whole time!
4/30/2012
UM PPS Activities
16
Conclusions
• The HV readout long test shows that almost always only one
line has a pulse (are the nearby dead?)
• A few features (like ΔT between events) not yet understood
• Increasing the HV maybe/likely
– increases the active pixel area
– increases the active distance in the gas gap to have plasma
discharges
– reduces the recovery voltage to have a new discharge (only for
low values of HV it is needed more than one recovery time to
have back the line to a voltage high enough to produce another
plasma discharge)
• To test the saturation effect we will keep the voltage fixed and
just change the quench resistor. We expect that starting from
low RHV the rate will increase until a certain value after which
it is constant
4/30/2012
UM PPS Activities
17