2017 Fall Meeting of the APS Division of Nuclear Physics
Volume 62, Number 11
Wednesday–Saturday, October 25–28, 2017;
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Session 1WC: Advances in Particle Detectors
9:00 AM–12:30 PM,
Wednesday, October 25, 2017
Room: Marquis C
Chair: Brian Quinn, Carnegie Mellon University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2017.DNP.1WC.3
Abstract: 1WC.00003 : Plasma-panel based detectors*
10:00 AM–10:30 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Peter Friedman
(Integrated Sensors, LLC)
The plasma panel sensor (PPS) is a novel micropattern gas detector inspired
by plasma display panels (PDPs), the core component of plasma-TVs. A PDP
comprises millions of discrete cells per square meter, each of which, when
provided with a signal pulse, can initiate and sustain a plasma discharge.
Configured as a detector, a pixel or cell is biased to discharge when a
free-electron is generated in the gas. The PPS consists of an array of small
plasma discharge pixels, and can be configured to have either an
``open-cell'' or ``closed-cell'' structure, operating with high gain in the
Geiger region. We describe both configurations and their application to
particle physics. The open-cell PPS lends itself to ultra-low-mass,
ultrathin structures, whereas the closed-cell microhexcavity PPS is capable
of higher performance. For the ultrathin-PPS, we are fabricating 3-inch
devices based on two types of extremely thin, inorganic, transparent,
substrate materials: one being 8-10 \textmu m thick, and the other 25-27
\textmu m thick. These gas-filled ultrathin devices are designed to operate
in a beam-line vacuum environment, yet must be hermetically-sealed and
gas-filled in an ambient environment at atmospheric pressure. We have
successfully fabricated high resolution, submillimeter pixel electrodes on
both types of ultrathin substrates. We will also report on the fabrication,
staging and operation of the first microhexcavity detectors (\textmu H-PPS).
The first \textmu H-PPS prototype devices have a 16 by 16 matrix of closed
packed hexagon pixels, each having a 2 mm width. Initial tests of these
detectors, conducted with Ne based gases at atmospheric pressure, indicate
that each pixel responds independent of its neighboring cells, producing
volt level pulse amplitudes in response to ionizing radiation. Results will
include the hit rate response to a radioactive beta source, cosmic ray
muons, the background from spontaneous discharge, pixel isolation and
uniformity, and efficiency measurements.
*This work was funded in part by a DOE Office of Nuclear Physics SBIR Phase-II Grant
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2017.DNP.1WC.3