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The Performance of Thick Gaseous Electron Multiplier Preamplifiers (THGEM) as a Neutron Sensitive Detector.

Introduction

Gaseous detectors using Gas Electron Multipliers <ref name="Sauli1997">F. Sauli, et al, NIM A386, (1997) 531-534 </ref > are becoming common in nuclear and high energy physics experiments.The Gas Electron Multiplier acts as a preamplifier inside the detector allowing the detector's charge collection elements to decrease in size. A kapton-based gas electron multiplier (GEM) requires the technology to etch an array of 50 micron diameter holes in 100 micron thick foils. Thick Gas Electron Multipliers (THGEMs) have 2 mm diameter holes which can be manufactured using a CNC machine. The objective of this work will be to measure the performance of the THGEM, and then its performance as it is coated with U-238 to detect fast neutrons that produce fission fragments from U-238 within the ionization chamber. This fission chamber-like device will have the advantage of measuring the location of the incident neutrons on the face of the detector.

The THGEM neutron detector is supported by a read out wire net to get the signal; the read out wire net is connected to a gum stick and a break board. A software (coda) is responsible for collecting and filing the data, then analyzing the data by means of ROOT (software package).

Neutrons are nucleons with a neutral charge; they interact generally with high atomic number elements that have high cross sections for certain reactions. Mostly, the neutrons interact with matter by fission, capture,conversion (to an alpha or a proton) and scattering.

The quality of the detected signal is dependent on many factors, but the study will concentrate on the effect of the thickness of the coated radioactive material for U-238 or Th-232 on the detector efficiency and sensitivity. If Th-232 is not available, then the study will compare the detector efficiency when it is coated by different thicknesses of U-238. Also developing a design for a THGEM card maximizes the gain with the least sparking rate under a voltage difference up to 2 kV between the top and bottom side of each THGEM card.

Chapter 1

Electron Multiplication (Least fission fragment K.E needed for ionization)

Electrons are fermions, negatively charged particles, usually bounded to the nucleus of an atom. Ionization is the process by which electrons are liberated from the confines of an atom. The minimum amount of energy required to liberate the electron is referred to as the ionization energy; when the electron becomes free moving with a certain velocity, then the energy transferred to it is greater than the ionization energy.The passage of heavy ions through a gas is one way in which to transfer energy to the bound atoms of a gas and liberate their electrons.


Least fission fragment K.E needed for ionization

For a positively charged particle (like a fission fragment) with a certain kinetic energy in an argon gas, electrons will start scattering around the path in all directions because of bremsstrahlung radiation produced by the decelerating by the charged particle, the charge particle is colliding directly with the gas atom, or the primary electrons are producing secondary electrons by electron-electron interactions.

In the case of low interacting particles with the gas, the incident particles interactions with the surrounding gas become less, so the number of the electrons released will not be enough to give an indication of the existence of these particles, so any electron produced primarily should have a larger multiplication.

Generic SideView GEMDetector.jpg

The THGEM card is designed to have a high voltage difference between the top and the bottom side; an electric field will appear with its lines more concentrated in the drilled holes.As free electrons are produced, they are going to be collected by the surrounding electric field toward the card holes. As the electron passes through one of the holes, it will be multiplied, then the multiplied electrons may get multiplied again if the detector is supported with an additional one or more THGEM cards. <ref name="Sauli1997">F. Sauli, et al, NIM A386, (1997) 531-534 </ref >

<ref name="CMB_KEK"> CMB Group "Detector technology project connects fields", www.kek.jp/intra-e/feature, Dec.4 2010,http://www.kek.jp/intra-e/feature/2009/KEKDTP.html </ref >

Microscopically, the electron is accelerated when it passes through a hole in which the electric field lines diverge strongly. The electron increased kinetic energy becomes sufficient to ionize other electrons bound to the gaseous atoms. Electrons from this secondary ionization are then accelerated and become the initiators of further ionization events. This process is known as Gas Avalanche Multiplication. <ref name="Shalem2005"> Shalem Chen Ken, "R&D of a novel gas electron multiplier – the THGEM", Master Thesis,the Scientific Council of the Weizmann Institute of Science </ref >

Gas Electron Multiplier (GEM)

The Gas Electron Multiplier (GEM) was invented by Sauli<ref name="Sauli1997"/> in 1997 using recent developments in lithography. The device is made from "flex circuit" technology which is based on 50 micron thick kapton foils clad on both sides with 5 microns of copper. Lithography is used to etch a staggered pattern of micron diameter holes equally spaced by distances comparable to the hole diameter. The small size facilitates the use of low voltages (300 Volts) in order to generate the electric field for amplification. By comparison, the typical drift chamber, operating on the same principle, would need more than 1 kV to establish a similar electric field. The GEM foil is flexible enough to be curved, allowing cylindrically shaped ionization chambers with larger active areas.

GEM has a micrometer scale for the design that makes it hard to maintain. Its sparking rate increases rapidly in as the voltage increases from 525V to 600V regardless of the pattern geometry, <ref name="A.Bressan1999">A.Bressan, et al, NIM A 424 (1999) 321—342</ref > but it has a low level noise since the operating voltage around 350V.

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When the design of the GEM card becomes in millimeter scale; the new design is called THGEM (thick gaseous electron multiplier)card. With the new design for THGEM, the foil becomes robust wih a higher operating voltage and relatively higher gain, but the detector has has a higher noise that can overwhelm the detector signal.

Chapter 2

Detector Structure and geometry of Thick Gaseous Electron Multiplier (THGEM)

The THGEM detector consists of a gas chamber, THGEM cards, a charge collector composed of strips, and a high voltage distribution circuit. A THGEM card is made from FR4/G10 clad on both sides with copper. The THGEM card is a 12x12 cm square plate that is 1 mm thick with 17 um thick copper cladding.<ref name="G. Agócs"> G. Agócs,JINST 3 P02012 2008</ref> Each card is chemically etched to leave a copper trace around the perimeter of the card that is 10 cm on each side as shown in the figure XX. A thin layer (5 microns) of resistive paste (ED-7100) is applied to the card to permit current to flow on the surface. The card is then machined to have a 0.5mm diameter hole. The resistance paste near the hole is machined away to form a 0.2 mm diameter rim around the hole. The holes are formed in a staggered array with a pitch of 0.8 mm.


THGEM cards are surrounded by a chamber made of two pieces of ertalyte (plastic) machined; with a kapton widow on the upper piece as shown in the figure. The two plastic parts are collected together by number of M3 plastic screws located around the detector window to form a cavity to have the cards in an insulated environment from the surrounding atmosphere. A 90/10 percent Ar/CO2 gas is used to generate electrons as the ionizing particles pass through it.

The THGEM cards are fixed in place using holders and separators in each corner to have transparency through the holes, separated from each other by a vertical distance of approximately 2.6 mm. A drift voltage card made of copper paper is placed at the top of the cards wit ha distance of 2.6 - 4 mm fro mthe last THGEM card.

A read out plate exists before the first THGEM card with a separation distance of 0.5 mm, it is connected to a 16 connectors, each connector has 20 traces. The connectors are then connected 130 pin connector by using a VFAT card which is also connected to a break board to read the signal from the detector.

Chapter 3

The Detector Physical Properties

Ionization Rate

Signal Size

The signal of the detector appears as a result of the electron multiplication which is represented by the gain, so the effect of the ions and fission fragments on the signal is negligible. The previous result can be proved mathematically or by the simulation.

Not only do the free electrons share in the signal, but the electronics used to detect the signal do as well. The figure shows a fast single photon pulse combined with two noise peaks caused by the electronics. <ref name="Chenchik2004"> R.Chechik,A.Breskin,C.Shalem, NIM A535, (2004) 303-308 </ref >

Furthermore, the signal reflects the magnitude of gain obtained as shown in the figure which represents a 60 keV X-ray signal when the gain magnitude is 180 and 220 respectively.<ref name="Bondar"> Bondar,A.Buzulutskov,A.Grebernuk, aXiv:0805.2018 </ref >

Fig. Double THGEM signal with electronic noise<ref name="Chenchik2004"/>
Fig. Double Fig.Signal produced when the gain is 220 and 180 respectively<ref name="Bondar"/>


The expected signal from the designed detector is composed of electron multiplication peak, background peak(s) of the radioactive isotope used (even U-38 or Th-232) and electronics noise peaks.

Radiation Backgound for Th-232 and U-238 Decay

The background energy spectrum for Th-232 has a main peak for alpha decay of energy 4082.8(14) keV combined with gamma rays of energy 63.81( 1) keV and intensity 26.3(13) percent.<ref name="Th-232"> http://home.fnal.gov/~hannahnp/decay/decay.html, Jan.5 2011,http://atom.kaeri.re.kr/cgi-bin/nuclide?nuc=Th-232</ref >.


U-238 has also a close background spectrum as being mainly an alpha emitter, but decay alpha energy is 4274(5) keV with less gamma intensity 1.02(15) percent when its energy is 113.5( 1) keV.<ref name="U-238"> Fermilab,http://home.fnal.gov/~hannahnp/decay/decay.html, Jan.5 2011,http://home.fnal.gov/~hannahnp/decay/U238.html</ref >


The ionization from alpha particles and gamma rays is considered negligible compared to the one for any fission fragment,because of the enormous difference in mass, charge and kinetic energy, but when the fission fragments are absent, there will always be a signal represents the alpha decay.

Fast neutron X-sect for U-238 and Th-232

The cross section is the proportionality constant for the relationship between the particle travelling distance dx and its probability to make an interaction.

The cross section values are represented as a function of energy. The importance of these curves gives the value of the cross section for each energy and shows the resonance peaks.Theoretically, there is not any model that gives a detailed prediction of cross section curve, but statistically it is possible to evaluate the parameters for an assumption that describes part of the cross section curve within a certain error.

Neutron fission is one of the interactions commonly taking place spontaneously or under certain experimental conditions. An incident neutron moving with kinetic energy hits a nucleus to produce new nuclei (fragments) and particles.


Neutrons are classified depending on their kinetic energy into three types: thermal, intermediate, and fast neutrons. the following table shows the range of each type, and additional types of neutrons that are important in applications with neutron energy less than the intermediate range.


Type Energy
Thermal 0.025 eV
Epithermal 0.025 eV – 0.2 eV
Resonance 1 eV – 1000 eV
Intermediate 1 keV – 500 keV
Fast > 0.5 MeV

<ref name="Dostal">General principles of neutron activation analysis, J. Dostal and C. Elson,p 28 Figure 2.3.</ref> <ref name="James">7-Ch. Jammes, P. Filliatre, B. Geslot, L. Oriol, F. Berhouet, J-F. Villard, “Research activities in fission chamber modeling in support of the nuclear energy industry”, ANIMMA International Conference, 7-10 June 2009, Marseille, France </ref>


U-238 and Th-232 belong to the actinides. There are characterized with relatively high neutron fission cross section for fast neutrons (specifically for neutron energy higher than 1.5 MeV ).


ENDF GEAN4 U238 fxsection.png Th-232 fission cross section.jpg

Efficiency and Sensitive THGEM

The efficiency of a detector is the ratio of the detected events to the the total number of events emitted by a source.


Sensitivity is a scale for the detector's ability to output a usable signal as a result of a particle interaction within the detector.<ref name="James"> Ch. Jammes, P. Filliatre, B. Geslot, L. Oriol, F. Berhouet, J-F. Villard,“Research activities in fission chamber modeling in support of the nuclear energy industry”, ANIMMA International Conference, 7-10, June 2009, Marseille, France.</ref>.Sensitivity for THGEM as a neutron detector is mainly depending on neutron energy range, material cross sections for ionization, neutrons rates of interactions,detector mass (in tons in the case of neutrinos),background, noise (sparking and electronic devices used to collect the signal) ,materials surrounding the detectors and the strength of the electric field.<ref name="James"/> <ref name="William">William R. Leo,Techniques for nuclear and particle physics experiments,1st edition,Springer Verlag, 1995.</ref>


Efficiency requires maximizing the rate of interactions by an appropriate choice for neutron fission sensitive material.Fission occurs creating fission fragments in the gas chamber with a known ionization rate under a certain pressure in a highly dense electric field environment. Amplification occurs for the number of electrons in three stages.The electrons will hit the read out card producing a signal collected by data acquisition system (daq) within a certain electronic noise.

Expectations And Conclusions

Assuming a given neutron with fixed energy and flux as well as a fixed material interaction thickness, then the choice of nuclide is the remaining variable to maximize the fission rate of the detector.

Getting the maximum efficiency requires maximizing the rate of interactions by an appropriate choice for neutron and ionization sensitive materials, supported by decreasing the noise and increasing the strength of the electric field in a detector mass built based on THGEM transparency offering a detection area changeable to adapt any application.

References

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Paul Reuss ,Neutron physics,L'editeur EDP Sciences,2008.



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