Speaker
Prof.
Vladimir Peskov
(CERN, Geneva)
Description
Recently developed micropattern gaseous detectors offer high position resolution,
excellent rate characteristics and good time resolutions. However the fine structure of
their metallic electrodes makes them very fragile and easily destroyable by occasional
sparks.
Our presentation will consist from two parts. In the first one we will review the latest
efforts made from various groups to implement the resistive electrode approach to
micropattern detectors technology with the aim to make these detectors similar to RPCs.
The first of such successive attempts was made a few years ago by our team to GEM
detector and several groups nowadays are experimenting in manufacturing and testing
resistive GEMs made of different materials. Recently, a great success was also achieved
in the case of MICROMEGAS detectors especially with its Ingrid and Gossip versions in
which the anode plates together with the readout micropixels were coated with a SiO2
protective resistive layer. Currently in the framework of the RD51 collaboration several
groups are developing conventional type MICROMEGAS with resistive anodes made of
different materials and performing their beam test.
In the second part our talk we will present a novel detector developed in the stream of
these studies. It is a hybrid of RPC made by a parallel-plate avalanche chamber: a
microgap gaseous detector with a resistive drift mesh and a resistive anode plate with
outer metallic readout strips. The version with a fine pitch (50μm) strips located inside
the anode gap was also successfully tested. The analysis shows that the latest design has a potential for an extremely good position resolution especially in the case of narrow drift
gap. The new detector enables to considerably extend the RPC application since it
features not only a high position resolution, but also a rather good energy resolution (18-20%FWHM for 6 keV) and if necessary can operate in cascaded mode. We will also
report on our efforts to develop a much thinner resistive mesh which can be used in
MICROMEGAS as well as in other micropttern detectors.
The main conclusion from these works is that a resistive electrode approach applied to
micropattern detectors makes them fully spark protected and thus we consider this
direction as very promising.
Primary author
Prof.
Vladimir Peskov
(CERN, Geneva)