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Transcript
Ionization Detectors
Basic operation



Charged particle passes through a gas
(argon, air, …) and ionizes it
Electrons and ions are collected by the
detector anode and cathode
Often there is secondary ionization
producing amplification
1
Ionization Detectors
 Modes of operation

Ionization mode
 Full charge collection but no amplification (gain=1)
 Generally used for gamma exposure and large fluxes

Proportional mode
 Ionization avalanche produces an amplified signal
proportional to the original ionization (gain = 103—105)
 Allows measurement of dE/dx

Limited proportional (streamer) mode
 Secondary avalanches from strong photo-emission and
space charge effects occur (gain = 1010)

Geiger-Muller mode
 Massive photo-emission results in many avalanches along
the wire resulting in a saturated signal
2
Ionization Detectors
3
Ionization
 Ionization


Direct – p + X -> p + X+ + ePenning effect - Ne* + Ar -> Ne + Ar+ + e-
 ntotal = nprimary + nsecondary
4
Ionization
 The number of primary e/ion pairs is Poisson
distributed, being due to a small number of
independent interactions
  1  P0;   1  e
 n prima ry
n primary for 1mm Ar  2.5 gives   0.92
 Total number of ions formed is
dE
x
ntotal  dx
, Wi is the effective ave. energy to make an ion pair
Wi
roughly, ntotal  2  4  n primary
5
Ionization
air
33.97
6
Ionization
For mixtures, e.g. Ar  CO2 80 : 20
2440
3010
nt  0.8
 0.2
 93 / cm
26
33
n p  0.8  29.4  0.2  34  30 / cm
7
Charge Transfer and Recombination
 Once ions and electrons are produced they
undergo collisions as they diffuse/drift
 These collisions can lead to recombination
thus lessening the signal
8
Diffusion
 Random thermal motion causes the electrons
and ions to move away from their point of
creation (diffusion)
 From kinetic theory
3
  kT ~ 0.04eV at room temperatu re
2
Maxwell distributi on gives
8kT
v
m
v(electrons ) ~ 106 cm / s
vions  ~ 10 4 cm / s
9
Diffusion
 Multiple collisions with gas atoms causes
diffusion
 The linear distribution of charges is Gaussian
10
Drift
 In the presence of an electric field E the
electrons/ions are accelerated along the field
lines towards the anode/cathode
 Collisions with other gas atoms limits the
maximum average (drift) velocity w
11
Drift
 A useful concept is mobility m

Drift velocity w = mE
 For ions, w+ is linearly proportional to E/P
(reduced E field) up to very high fields


That’s because the average energy of the ions
doesn’t change very much between collisions
The ion mobilities are ~ constant at 1-1.5 cm2/Vs
 The drift velocity of ions is small compared to
the (randomly oriented) thermal velocity
12
Drift
For ions in a gas mixture, a very
efficient process of charge transfer
takes place where all ions are removed
except those with the lower ionization
potential

Usually occurs in 100-1000 collisions
13
Drift
 Electrons in an electric field can substantially
increase their energy between collisions with
gas molecules
 The drift velocity is given by the Townsend
expression (F=ma)
eE
w  mE  t
m
1
t
N  v


Where t is the time between collisions,  is the
energy, N is the number of molecules/V and  is the
instantaneous velocity
14
Drift
15
Drift
Large range of drift velocities and
diffusion constants
16
Drift
Note that at high E fields the drift
velocity is no longer proportional to E

That’s where the drift velocity becomes
comparable to the thermal velocity
Some gases like Ar-CH4 (90:10) have a
saturated drift velocity (i.e. doesn’t
change with E)

This is good for drift chambers where the
time of the electrons is measured
17
Drift
Ar-CO2 is a common gas for proportional
and drift chambers
18
Drift
Electrons can be captured by O2 in the
gas, neutralized by an ion, or absorbed
by the walls
19
Proportional Counter
 Consider a parallel plate ionization chamber of
1 cm thickness

Q
Q
100e
V 
~
 1mV
C  0 A / d 10 pf
 Fine for an x-ray beam of 106 photons this is
fine
 But for single particle detectors we need
amplification!
20
Proportional Counter
2
C
ln b / a 
 Close to the anode the E field is sufficiently high (some
kV/cm) that the electrons gain sufficient energy to
further ionize the gas

Number of electron-ion pairs exponentially increases
21
Proportional Counter
22
Proportional Counter
There are other ways to generate high
electric fields

These are used in micropattern detectors
(MSGC, MICROMEGAS, GEM) which give
improved rate capability and position
resolution
23
Proportional Counter
 Multiplication of ionization is described by the
first Townsend coefficient a(E)
dn  nadx where a 
n  n0 exp( a E x)
1

rc


n
M
 exp   a r dr 
n0
 a

 a(E) is determined by


Excitation and ionization electron cross sections in
the gas
Represents the number of ion pairs produced / path
24
length
Proportional Counter
Values of first Townsend coefficient
25
Proportional Counter
Values of first Townsend coefficient
26
Proportional Counter
Electron-molecule collisions are quite
complicated
27
Avalanche Formation
28
Signal Development
The time development of the signal in a
proportional chamber is somewhat
different than that in an ionization
chamber


Multiplication usually takes place at a few
wire radii from the anode (r=Na)
The motion of the electrons and ions in the
applied field causes a change in the system
energy and a capacitively induced signal
dV
29
Signal Development
 Surprisingly, in a proportional counter, the
signal due to the positive ions dominates
because they move all the way to the cathode
dU  CVdV  qEdr
 q CV0 / r
q
a
V   dV 
dr 
ln

CV0 Na l 2
l 2 Na
Na

a
a
b
q
V   dV 
CV0
Na


V  V
b
CV0 / r
q
b
Na l 2 dr  l 2 ln Na

30
Signal Development
 Considering only the ions
dV
q
r t 
V t   
dr 
ln
dr
l 2
a
r 0 
r t 
mCV0 1
dr
 mE r  
dt
l 2 r
solving for r t  and substituti ng
 mCV0 
V t   
ln 1 
t
2 
4l  la 
q
31
Signal Development
The signal grows quickly so it’s not
necessary to collect the entire signal


~1/2 the signal is collected in ~1/1000 the
time
Usually a differentiator is used
32
Signal Development
The pulse is thus cut short by the RC
differentiating circuit
33
Gas
Operationally desire low working voltage
and high gain

Avalanche multiplication occurs in noble gases
at much lower fields than in complex molecules
 Argon is plentiful and inexpensive

But the de-excitation of noble gases is via
photon emission with energy greater than
metal work function
 11.6 eV photon from Ar versus 7.7 eV for Cu

This leads to permanent discharge from deexcitation photons or electrons emitted at
cathode walls
34
Gas
Argon+X

X is a polyatomic (quencher) gas
 CH4, CO2, CF4, isobutane, alcohols, …


Polyatomic gases have large number of
non-radiating excited states that provide
for the absorption of photons in a wide
energy range
Even a small amount of X can completely
change the operation of the chamber
 Recall we stated that there exists a very
efficient ion exchange mechanism that quickly
removes all ions except those with the lowest
ionization potential I
35
Gas
Argon+X

Neutralization of the ions at the cathode
can occur by dissociation or polymerization
 Must flow gas
 Be aware of possible polymerization on anode
or cathode

Malter effect
 Insulator buildup on cathode
 Positive ion buildup on insulator
 Electron extraction from cathode
 Permanent discharge
36
Gas
Polymerization on anodes
37
Proportional Counters
 Many different types of gas detectors have
evolved from the proportional counter
38
Drift
Ar-CO2 is a common gas for proportional
and drift chambers
39
Drift
40
Proportional Counter
41