Affiliation:
1. California Institute of Technology
Abstract
Inorganic scintillators often use exotic, expensive materials to
increase their light yield. Although material chemistry is a valid way
to increase the light collection, these methods are expensive and
limited to the material properties. As such, alternative methods such
as the use of specific reflective coatings and crystal optical shapes
are critical for the scintillator crystal design procedure. In this
paper, we explore the modeling of a scintillator and
silicon-photomultiplier (SiPM) assembly detector using GEANT4. GEANT4,
an open-source software for particle–matter interaction based on
ray-tracing, allows the modeling of a scintillator-based detector
while offering methods to simplify and study the computational
requirements for a precise calculation of the light collection. These
studies incorporate two different geometries compatible with the
barrel timing layer (BTL) particle detector that is being built for
the compact muon solenoid (CME) experiment at CERN. Furthermore, the
geometry of our model is parameterized using splines for smoother
results and meshed using GMSH to perform genetic numerical
optimization of the crystal shape through genetic algorithms, in
particular non-dominated sorting genetic algorithm II (NGSAII). Using
NSGA-II, we provide a series of optimized scintillator geometries and
study the trade-offs of multiple possible objective functions
including the light output, light collection, light collection per
energy deposited, and track path length. The converged Pareto results
according to the hypervolume indicator are compared to the original
simplified design, and a recommendation towards the use of the light
collection per energy deposition and track path length is given based
on the results. The results provide increases in this objective of up
to 18% for a constant volume for a geometry compatible with the
current design of the BTL detector.
Funder
U.S. Department of Energy