Longevity study of a triple-GEM chamber for the HL-LHC upgrade

7 Nov 2023, 11:25
25m
40/S2-C01 - Salle Marie Sklodowska-Curie (CERN)

40/S2-C01 - Salle Marie Sklodowska-Curie

CERN

115
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Speaker

Kerstin Hoepfner (Rheinisch Westfaelische Tech. Hoch. (DE))

Description

As part of the high-luminosity LHC (HL-LHC) upgrade, the CMS muon spectrometer will extend its coverage in the very forward region with triple-GEM detectors. These detectors will cope with a harsh environment with expected background fluxes up to 150 kHz/cm^2. At the end of HL-LHC operation, the total accumulated charge at the hottest point is expected to reach 7.9 C/cm^2. This accumulated charge is unprecedented for a GEM detector.

A full-size triple-GEM chamber was built using the design planned for the most forward CMS muon station using GEM foils produced at CERN. Using a gas mixture of Ar/CO2 (70/30)%, the chamber was irradiated with photons from a silver-target X-ray source over 1.5 years to reach an accumulated charge of 8 C/cm^2. Before and after irradiation the chamber was validated using the standard quality control procedures; gas gain and energy resolution were measured. During irradiation the gain was monitored weekly. The irradiation was interrupted only for the certification measurements. A non-irradiated sector was monitored for comparison. Temperature and pressure in the lab were continuously measured to derive correction factors to calibrate the gas gain. No degradation in gas gain was observed when reaching 8 C/cm^2. Irradiated and non-irradiated chamber components were inspected for potential impacts from irradiation.

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