학술논문

Aging in the large CDF axial drift chamber
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science IEEE Trans. Nucl. Sci. Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on. 52(6):2956-2962 Dec, 2005
Subject
Nuclear Engineering
Bioengineering
Aging
Monitoring
Fluid flow
Coatings
Detectors
Argon
Voltage
Polymers
Azimuth
Temperature distribution
Ablation
aging
alcohol
argon
ethane
gas
ionization chambers
polymerization
tracking
wire
Language
ISSN
0018-9499
1558-1578
Abstract
The Central Outer Tracker (COT) is a large axial drift chamber in the Collider Detector at Fermilab operating with a gas mixture that is 50/50 argon/ethane with an admixture of 1.7% isopropanol. In its first two years of operation the COT showed unexpected aging with the worst parts of the chamber experiencing a gain loss of /spl sim/50% for an accumulated charge of /spl sim/35 mC/cm. By monitoring the pulse height of hits on good tracks, it was possible to determine the gain as a function of time and location in the chamber. In addition, the currents of the high voltage supplies gave another monitor of chamber gain and its dependence on the charge deposition rate. The aging was worse on the exhaust end of the chamber consistent with polymer buildup as the gas flows through the chamber. The distribution in azimuth suggests that aging is enhanced at lower temperatures, but other factors such as gas flow patterns may be involved. Elemental and molecular analysis of the sense wires found a coating that is mostly carbon and hydrogen with a small amount of oxygen; no silicon or other contaminants were identified. High resolution electron microscope pictures of the wire surface show that the coating is smooth with small sub-micron nodules. In the course of working with the chamber gas system, we discovered a small amount of O/sub 2/ is enough to reverse the aging. Operating the chamber with /spl sim/100 ppm of O/sub 2/ reversed almost two years of gain loss in less than 10 days while accumulating /spl les/2 mC/cm.