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Archived Messages for HALLB@cebaf.gov: Minutes of the 05/08/98 Hall B Upgrade Meeting

Minutes of the 05/08/98 Hall B Upgrade Meeting

MECKING@micro3.jlab.org
Tue, 12 May 1998 14:59:35 -0500 (EST)

M E M O R A N D U M

TO: Distribution

FROM: B. Mecking

SUBJECT: Hall B Upgrade Meeting Notes

DATE: 12-May-1998

MINUTES OF THE 8-MAY-1998 HALL B UPGRADE MEETING

Present: V. Burkert, D. Cords, A. Freyberger, H. Fenker, M. Ito,
F.-J. Klein, B. Mecking, C. Salgado, E. Smith, D. Sober,
and S. Stepanyan

Howard Fenker presented a review of tracking techniques that may be
appropriate for the CLAS inner tracking detector

1. Silicon detectors

300 microns typical thickness, may be able to get away with 200 microns

no amplification, S/N problem

2. PWC with strip readout

could orient strips at 45 degrees

3. Vertical drift chamber

ideal for focal plane detectors with limited angular range

4. Straw chambers

need several layers for redundancy

material in walls could be a problem (ATLAS is using 4 mm diameter straws
with 60 microns wall thickness)

practical problem: ensure uniform gas supply

5. Microstrip gas chamber (MSGC)

2-4 mm ionization region followed by 150 microns amplification region

200 microns separation between the strips, typically not making use of the
drift time

max. size of the glass substrate: 1 square foot, typical thickness 0.5 mm

6. Micro-gap chamber

7. Scintillating fibers

1.8 mm diameter is typical (1 mm may be doable in the future)
-> material thickness is a problem

need high efficiency photon counters (cryogenically cooled?)

8. Micro-mesh gas chamber (G. Charpak)

wire mesh supported by 50 micron diameter quartz fibers

could use strips for readout

difficult to use in non-planar structures

9. Micro-dot gas chamber

could be folded into curved sheets

10. Gas electron multiplier GEM (F. Sauli)

thin intermediate amplification sheet, can be combined with any readout
scheme

50 micron Kapton sheet covered with 5 micron Cu, with lots of chemically
etched 70 micron holes, electron transparency > 50%.

provides 20K gain @ 60kV/cm gradient (300 Volts across the foil)

advantage: ions have a short path, -> high rate capability

presently in the advanced R&D stage

Howard's personal favorite is a curved GEM.

Next upgrade meeting:
Friday, 15-May-1998 9:30 - 10.50 a.m. (Seminar at 11:00 a.m.)
Trailer City Room 84

Topic: Simulation results (Stepan Stepanyan)

Distribution: CLAS Collaboration