• DocumentCode
    819727
  • Title

    Acceptance tests and criteria of the ATLAS transition radiation tracker

  • Author

    Cwetanski, P. ; Åkesson, T. ; Anghinolfi, F. ; Arik, E. ; Baker, O.K. ; Banás, E. ; Baron, S. ; Benjamin, D. ; Bertelsen, H. ; Bondarenko, V. ; Bytchkov, V. ; Callahan, J. ; Capeans, M. ; Cardiel-Sas, L. ; Catinaccio, A. ; Cetin, S.A. ; Chandler, J.T. ; D

  • Volume
    52
  • Issue
    6
  • fYear
    2005
  • Firstpage
    2911
  • Lastpage
    2916
  • Abstract
    The Transition Radiation Tracker (TRT) sits at the outermost part of the ATLAS Inner Detector, encasing the Pixel Detector and the Semi-Conductor Tracker (SCT). The TRT combines charged particle track reconstruction with electron identification capability. This is achieved by layers of xenon-filled straw tubes with periodic radiator foils or fibers providing TR photon emission. The design and choice of materials have been optimized to cope with the harsh operating conditions at the LHC, which are expected to lead to an accumulated radiation dose of 10 Mrad and a neutron fluence of up to 2middot1014 n/cm2 after ten years of operation. The TRT comprises a barrel containing 52 000 axial straws and two end-cap parts with 320 000 radial straws. The total of 420 000 electronic channels (two channels per barrel straw) allows continuous tracking with many projective measurements (more than 30 straw hits per track). The assembly of the barrel modules in the US has recently been completed, while the end-cap wheel construction in Russia has reached the 50% mark. After testing at the production sites and shipment to CERN, all modules and wheels undergo a series of quality and conformity measurements. These acceptance tests survey dimensions, wire tension, gas-tightness, high-voltage stability and gas-gain uniformity along each individual straw. This paper gives details on the acceptance criteria and measurement methods. An overview of the most important results obtained to-date is also given
  • Keywords
    dosimetry; gas scintillation detectors; nuclear electronics; particle tracks; transition radiation detectors; ATLAS inner detector; CERN; LHC; barrel modules; charged particle track reconstruction; electron identification capability; electronic channels; end-cap wheel construction; gas-gain uniformity; gas-tightness; high-voltage stability; neutron fluence; periodic radiator foils; photon emission; pixel detector; projective measurements; radiation dose; semiconductor tracker; transition radiation tracker; xenon filled straw tubes; Assembly; Design optimization; Electrons; Large Hadron Collider; Modular construction; Neutrons; Particle tracking; Radiation detectors; Testing; Wheels; Acceptance criteria; gas detectors; quality control; straw tubes; tracking; transition radiation;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9499
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TNS.2005.862799
  • Filename
    1589298