Bulletin of the American Physical Society
85th Annual Meeting of the APS Southeastern Section
Volume 63, Number 19
Thursday–Saturday, November 8–10, 2018; Holiday Inn at World’s Fair Park, Knoxville, Tennessee
Session C03: Instrumentation I
2:00 PM–3:48 PM,
Thursday, November 8, 2018
Holiday Inn Knoxville Downtown
Room: Parlor
Chair: Kelly Chipps, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Abstract ID: BAPS.2018.SES.C03.8
Abstract: C03.00008 : Construction of a Multi-Wire Proportional Chamber for Muon Detection
3:24 PM–3:36 PM
Presenter:
Emma I Pearson
(Kennesaw State University)
Author:
Emma I Pearson
(Kennesaw State University)
The Society of Physics Students (SPS) at Kennesaw State University is building a series of Multi-Wire Proportional Chambers as a tool to detect cosmic ray muons with the goal of doing muon tomography on large structures.
Chamber construction is done using a 3-D printer. The chambers are required to be sealed and hold an ionizing gas, which in our case is an Argon/CO2 mix in an 80:20 ratio. The design of the prototype chamber was reworked such that the entire frame could be made in a single 3-D print operation, rather than as a series of printed pieces which needed to be sealed together. This modification allowed the chambers to hold the gas mixture properly without leaking. The geometry of the 3-D printing was done using SolidWorks, and the printing was done using a Makerbot Ultimaker 2 with PLA, a biodegradable, plant-based plastic.
Once the frames were printed, both the sense wires and field-shaping wires needed to be attached and soldered under tension, with spacing between wires of 3 mm. Since the wires are extremely fine, (the sense wires are gold-plated tungsten with a diameter of 25 microns) the process of attaching them is not trivial, so grooves were added to the printed frame design to aid in the alignment of the wires.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2018.SES.C03.8
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