Author:
Cortesi M.,Sims H.,Pereira J.,Ayyad Y.,Majewski P.A.,Katsioulas I.
Abstract
Abstract
We present a measurement of the secondary scintillation
yield produced by two-layer Thick Gas Electron Multipliers
(M-THGEMs) in pure Tetrafluoromethane (CF4) gas and in Ar mixed
with 5% Xe in low-pressures down to 20 Torr. The detector was
irradiated with 5.49 MeV alpha particles from a low-rate 241-Am
source. The secondary scintillation light generated during the gas
avalanche process was read out by a Hamamatsu photomultiplier tube
(model R8520-406), sensitive to a broad wavelength range
(160–650 nm). The avalanche charge was collected on the bottom
electrode of M-THGEM and correlated to the scintillation light on an
event-by-event basis. We observed that, for both gas types, the
value of the photon to electron production ratio (0.4 ph/el in
CF4 and 0.1 ph/el in Ar/5%Xe) increases with the thickness of
the M-THGEM electrodes and varies significantly with the pressure,
being higher at lower values. The decrease in electroluminescence
yield at higher pressures is much more pronounced in the Ar/Xe
mixture. In addition, because of a larger gas avalanche volume, the
electroluminescence light yield is larger in thicker M-THGEM
structures. Presented results are particularly useful for designing
the next generation of Optical-readout Time Projection Chambers
(O-TPCs) operated at low-pressure CF4; applications include
experimental nuclear physics with rare isotope beams, dark matter
detection with directional sensitivity and observation of the Migdal
effect in a low-pressure Optical TPC.
Subject
Mathematical Physics,Instrumentation