Title :
Recent aging studies for the ATLAS transition radiation tracker
Author_Institution :
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
Abstract :
The transition radiation tracker (TRT) is part of the inner detector of the ATLAS experiment. It contains 52000 150 cm long straws in the barrel, and 320000 radial straws of 39 to 55 cm height in the two end-cap parts. After 10 years of operation the most exposed straws will accumulate a radiation dose of about 10 Mrad, and up to a neutron fluence of 2 × 1014 n/cm2. These doses result in unprecedented ionization currents and integrated charge (∼10 C/cm of wire) for a large-scale gaseous detector. The original operating gas was Xe-CF4-CO2 70-20-10, a reasonable compromise between conflicting requirements. The use of CF4 permits, in addition to obtaining a fast drift time, to achieve lifetimes of a few tenths of one C/cm for the straws. In the present baseline, reviewed in 2002, the TRT will operate with a Xe-CO2 mixture with a small percentage of oxygen that adds a significant safety margin to a simpler binary mixture. This mixture is however less robust in terms of aging, particularly it is very sensitive to silicon pollution, and special measures will be required to reach the necessary level of purity for the gas systems components. It has been found that a small addition of CF4 to the gas in the high luminosity LHC environment is efficient to clean up aged wires. Periodic cleaning runs of the TRT tracker are foreseen, if needed.
Keywords :
ageing; organic compounds; oxygen; pollution; transition radiation detectors; xenon compounds; 10 Mrad; 10 year; 39 to 55 cm; ATLAS Transition Radiation Tracker; ATLAS experiment Inner Detector; TRT; Xe-CF4-CO2; Xe-CO2; Xe-CO2 mixture; Xe-CO2-O2; aged wires; aging; barrel; binary mixture; drift time; exposed straws; gas systems components; high luminosity LHC environment; integrated charge; ionization currents; large-scale gaseous detector; lifetimes; long straws; operating gas; oxygen; periodic cleaning runs; purity level; radial straws; radiation dose; safety margin; silicon pollution; Aging; Ionization; Large scale integration; Neutrons; Pollution; Radiation detectors; Robustness; Safety; Silicon; Wire;
Conference_Titel :
Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record, 2003 IEEE
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8257-9
DOI :
10.1109/NSSMIC.2003.1352712