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M. Guthoff

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DOI: 10.1088/1748-0221/13/01/c01029
2018
Cited 41 times
Diamond detectors for high energy physics experiments
Beam test results of the radiation tolerance study of chemical vapour deposition (CVD) diamond against different particle species and energies is presented. We also present beam test results on the independence of signal size on incident particle rate in charged particle detectors based on un-irradiated and irradiated poly-crystalline CVD diamond over a range of particle fluxes from 2 kHz/cm2 to 10 MHz/cm2. The pulse height of the sensors was measured with readout electronics with a peaking time of 6 ns. In addition functionality of poly-crystalline CVD diamond 3D devices was demonstrated in beam tests and 3D diamond detectors are shown to be a promising technology for applications in future high luminosity experiments.
DOI: 10.1016/j.nima.2012.01.029
2012
Cited 20 times
Geant4 simulation of a filtered X-ray source for radiation damage studies
Geant4 low energy extensions have been used to simulate the X-ray spectra of industrial X-ray tubes with filters for removing the uncertain low energy part of the spectrum in a controlled way. The results are compared with precisely measured X-ray spectra using a silicon drift detector. Furthermore, this paper shows how the different dose rates in silicon and silicon dioxide layers of an electronic device can be deduced from the simulations.
DOI: 10.1002/pssa.201600185
2016
Cited 16 times
Severe signal loss in diamond beam loss monitors in high particle rate environments by charge trapping in radiation‐induced defects
The beam condition monitoring leakage (BCML) system is a beam monitoring device in the compact muon solenoid (CMS) experiment at the large hadron collider (LHC). As detectors 32 poly‐crystalline (pCVD) diamond sensors are positioned in rings around the beam pipe. Here, high particle rates occur from the colliding beams scattering particles outside the beam pipe. These particles cause defects, which act as traps for the ionization, thus reducing the charge collection efficiency (CCE). However, the loss in CCE was much more severe than expected from low rate laboratory measurements and simulations, especially in single‐crystalline (sCVD) diamonds, which have a low initial concentration of defects. After an integrated luminosity of a few corresponding to a few weeks of LHC operation, the CCE of the sCVD diamonds dropped by a factor of five or more and quickly approached the poor CCE of pCVD diamonds. The reason why in real experiments the CCE is much worse than in laboratory experiments is related to the ionization rate. At high particle rates the trapping rate of the ionization is so high compared with the detrapping rate, that space charge builds up. This space charge reduces locally the internal electric field, which in turn increases the trapping rate and recombination and hence reduces the CCE in a strongly non‐linear way. A diamond irradiation campaign was started to investigate the rate‐dependent electrical field deformation with respect to the radiation damage. Besides the electrical field measurements via the transient current technique (TCT), the CCE was measured. The experimental results were used to create an effective deep trap model that takes the radiation damage into account. Using this trap model, the rate‐dependent electrical field deformation and the CCE were simulated with the software SILVACO TCAD. The simulation, tuned to rate‐dependent measurements from a strong radioactive source, was able to predict the non‐linear decrease of the CCE in the harsh environment of the LHC, where the particle rate was a factor 30 higher.
DOI: 10.22323/1.449.0603
2024
A custom setup for thermal conductivity measurements.
Future detector systems have increasing demands on the performance of their mechanical support structures and cooling systems. Novel materials and cooling techniques are developed and continuously improved in order to fulfil these requirements. A custom thermal conductivity measurement setup is presented to measure these materials thermal conductivity. The setup consists of two heat flux meter blocks between which the samples are clamped. The setup follows the American Society for Testing and Materials standard D5470-06 and consists of two brass blocks, which act as heat flow meters. In order to minimize heat exchange between the heat flux blocks and the ambient via convection and radiation, the setup is covered with a radiation shield and measurements are carried out in a vacuum. The contribution describes the setup in detail, motivates its design aspects and highlights the commissioning and calibration procedure. The analysis method and calibration procedure are presented.
DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.2402.03971
2024
The CMS Fast Beam Condition Monitor for HL-LHC
The high-luminosity upgrade of the LHC brings unprecedented requirements for real-time and precision bunch-by-bunch online luminosity measurement and beam-induced background monitoring. A key component of the CMS Beam Radiation, Instrumentation and Luminosity system is a stand-alone luminometer, the Fast Beam Condition Monitor (FBCM), which is fully independent from the CMS central trigger and data acquisition services and able to operate at all times with a triggerless readout. FBCM utilizes a dedicated front-end application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) to amplify the signals from CO$_2$-cooled silicon-pad sensors with a timing resolution of a few nanoseconds, which enables the measurement of the beam-induced background. FBCM uses a modular design with two half-disks of twelve modules at each end of CMS, with four service modules placed close to the outer edge to reduce radiation-induced aging. The electronics system design adapts several components from the CMS Tracker for power, control and read-out functionalities. The dedicated FBCM23 ASIC contains six channels and adjustable shaping time to optimize the noise with regards to sensor leakage current. Each ASIC channel outputs a single binary high-speed asynchronous signal carrying time-of-arrival and time-over-threshold information. The chip output signal is digitized, encoded and sent via a radiation-hard gigabit transceiver and an optical link to the back-end electronics for analysis. This paper reports on the updated design of the FBCM detector and the ongoing testing program.
DOI: 10.1088/1748-0221/19/03/c03048
2024
The CMS Fast Beam Condition Monitor for HL-LHC
Abstract The high-luminosity upgrade of the LHC brings unprecedented requirements for real-time and precision bunch-by-bunch online luminosity measurement and beam-induced background monitoring. A key component of the CMS Beam Radiation, Instrumentation and Luminosity system is a stand-alone luminometer, the Fast Beam Condition Monitor (FBCM), which is fully independent from the CMS central trigger and data acquisition services and able to operate at all times with a triggerless readout. FBCM utilizes a dedicated front-end application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) to amplify the signals from CO 2 -cooled silicon-pad sensors with a timing resolution of a few nanoseconds, which enables the measurement of the beam-induced background. FBCM uses a modular design with two half-disks of twelve modules at each end of CMS, with four service modules placed close to the outer edge to reduce radiation-induced aging. The electronics system design adapts several components from the CMS Tracker for power, control and read-out functionalities. The dedicated FBCM23 ASIC contains six channels and adjustable shaping time to optimize the noise with regards to sensor leakage current. Each ASIC channel outputs a single binary high-speed asynchronous signal carrying time-of-arrival and time-over-threshold information. The chip output signal is digitized, encoded, and sent via a radiation-hard gigabit transceiver and an optical link to the back-end electronics for analysis. This paper reports on the updated design of the FBCM detector and the ongoing testing program.
DOI: 10.1016/j.nima.2013.05.041
2013
Cited 17 times
Radiation damage in the diamond based beam condition monitors of the CMS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN
Abstract The Beam Condition Monitor (BCM) of the CMS detector at the LHC is a protection device similar to the LHC Beam Loss Monitor system. While the electronics used is the same, poly-crystalline Chemical Vapor Deposition (pCVD) diamonds are used instead of ionization chambers as the BCM sensor material. The main purpose of the system is the protection of the silicon Pixel and Strip tracking detectors by inducing a beam dump, if the beam losses are too high in the CMS detector. By comparing the detector current with the instantaneous luminosity, the BCM detector efficiency can be monitored. The number of radiation-induced defects in the diamond, reduces the charge collection distance, and hence lowers the signal. The number of these induced defects can be simulated using the FLUKA Monte Carlo simulation. The cross-section for creating defects increases with decreasing energies of the impinging particles. This explains, why diamond sensors mounted close to heavy calorimeters experience more radiation damage, because of the high number of low energy neutrons in these regions. The signal decrease was stronger than expected from the number of simulated defects. Here polarization from trapped charge carriers in the defects is a likely candidate for explaining the difference, as suggested by Transient Current Technique (TCT) measurements. A single-crystalline (sCVD) diamond sensor shows a faster relative signal decrease than a pCVD sensor mounted at the same location. This is expected, since the relative increase in the number of defects is larger in sCVD than in pCVD sensors.
DOI: 10.1016/j.nima.2013.08.083
2014
Cited 17 times
Simulation of beam induced lattice defects of diamond detectors using FLUKA
Diamond is more and more used as a detector material for particle detection. One argument for diamond is its higher radiation hardness compared to silicon. Since various particles have different potentials for radiation damage at different energies, a scaling rule is necessary for the prediction of radiation damage. For silicon detectors the non-ionising energy loss (NIEL) is used for scaling the effects of different particles. A different way of predicting the radiation damage is based on the Norget–Robinson–Torrens theorem to predict the number of displacements per atom (DPA). This provides a better scaling rule since recombination effects are taken into account. This model is implemented in the FLUKA Monte Carlo simulations package for protons, neutrons and pions. We compare simulation results of NIEL and DPA for diamond and silicon material exposed to protons, neutrons and pions for a wide range of energies.
DOI: 10.1088/1361-6463/ab37c6
2019
Cited 14 times
A study of the radiation tolerance of poly-crystalline and single-crystalline CVD diamond to 800 MeV and 24 GeV protons
Abstract We have measured the radiation tolerance of poly-crystalline and single-crystalline diamonds grown by the chemical vapor deposition (CVD) process by measuring the charge collected before and after irradiation in a 50 m pitch strip detector fabricated on each diamond sample. We irradiated one group of sensors with 800 MeV protons, and a second group of sensors with 24 GeV protons, in steps, to protons cm −2 and protons cm −2 respectively. We observe the sum of mean drift paths for electrons and holes for both poly-crystalline CVD diamond and single-crystalline CVD diamond decreases with irradiation fluence from its initial value according to a simple damage curve characterized by a damage constant for each irradiation energy and the irradiation fluence. We find for each irradiation energy the damage constant, for poly-crystalline CVD diamond to be the same within statistical errors as the damage constant for single-crystalline CVD diamond. We find the damage constant for diamond irradiated with 24 GeV protons to be and the damage constant for diamond irradiated with 800 MeV protons to be . Moreover, we observe the pulse height decreases with fluence for poly-crystalline CVD material and within statistical errors does not change with fluence for single-crystalline CVD material for both 24 GeV proton irradiation and 800 MeV proton irradiation. Finally, we have measured the uniformity of each sample as a function of fluence and observed that for poly-crystalline CVD diamond the samples become more uniform with fluence while for single-crystalline CVD diamond the uniformity does not change with fluence.
DOI: 10.1007/jhep12(2021)083
2021
Cited 9 times
Probing effective field theory operators in the associated production of top quarks with a Z boson in multilepton final states at $$ \sqrt{s} $$ = 13 TeV
A bstract A search for new top quark interactions is performed within the framework of an effective field theory using the associated production of either one or two top quarks with a Z boson in multilepton final states. The data sample corresponds to an integrated luminosity of 138 fb − 1 of proton-proton collisions at $$ \sqrt{s} $$ <mml:math xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML"> <mml:msqrt> <mml:mi>s</mml:mi> </mml:msqrt> </mml:math> = 13 TeV collected by the CMS experiment at the LHC. Five dimension-six operators modifying the electroweak interactions of the top quark are considered. Novel machine-learning techniques are used to enhance the sensitivity to effects arising from these operators. Distributions used for the signal extraction are parameterized in terms of Wilson coefficients describing the interaction strengths of the operators. All five Wilson coefficients are simultaneously fit to data and 95% confidence level intervals are computed. All results are consistent with the SM expectations.
DOI: 10.1016/j.nuclphysbps.2015.09.160
2016
Cited 11 times
Diamond Particle Detectors for High Energy Physics
Diamond devices have now become ubiquitous in the LHC experiments, finding applications in beam background monitoring and luminosity measuring systems. This sensor material is now maturing to the point that the large pads in existing diamond detectors are being replaced by highly granular tracking devices, in both pixel and strip configurations, for detector systems that will be used in Run II at the LHC and beyond. The RD42 collaboration has continued to seek out additional diamond manufacturers and quantify the limits of the radiation tolerance of this material. The ATLAS experiment has recently installed, and is now commissioning a fully-fledged pixel tracking detector system based on diamond sensors. Finally, RD42 has recently demonstrated the viability of 3D biased diamond sensors that can be operated at very low voltages with full charge collection. These proceedings describe all of these advances.
DOI: 10.1016/j.nima.2018.06.009
2019
Cited 9 times
Diamond detector technology, status and perspectives
Detectors based on Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD) diamond have been used extensively and successfully in beam conditions/beam loss monitors as the innermost detectors in the highest radiation areas of Large Hadron Collider (LHC) experiments. The startup of the LHC in 2015 brought a new milestone where the first polycrystalline CVD (pCVD) diamond pixel modules were installed in an LHC experiment and successfully began operation. The RD42 collaboration at CERN is leading the effort to develop polycrystalline CVD diamond as a material for tracking detectors operating in extreme radiation environments. The status of the RD42 project with emphasis on recent beam test results is presented.
DOI: 10.1140/epjc/s10052-023-11713-6
2023
The Pixel Luminosity Telescope: a detector for luminosity measurement at CMS using silicon pixel sensors
The Pixel Luminosity Telescope is a silicon pixel detector dedicated to luminosity measurement at the CMS experiment at the LHC. It is located approximately 1.75 m from the interaction point and arranged into 16 "telescopes", with eight telescopes installed around the beam pipe at either end of the detector and each telescope composed of three individual silicon sensor planes. The per-bunch instantaneous luminosity is measured by counting events where all three planes in the telescope register a hit, using a special readout at the full LHC bunch-crossing rate of 40 MHz. The full pixel information is read out at a lower rate and can be used to determine calibrations, corrections, and systematic uncertainties for the online and offline measurements. This paper details the commissioning, operational history, and performance of the detector during Run 2 (2015-18) of the LHC, as well as preparations for Run 3, which will begin in 2022.
DOI: 10.5445/ir/1000044731
2014
Cited 8 times
Radiation Damage to the diamond-based Beam Condition Monitor of the CMS Detector at the LHC
In the Beam Condition Monitor at the CMS experiment at the LHC, CVD diamonds are used as detectors. During Run 1 operation of the LHC, significant reduction of signal efficiency due to radiation damage was observed. The decrease was significantly stronger than expected. The so-called polarization effect is responsible for this signal reduction. Electric field deformations due to trapped charge carriers are shown in measurements using the transient current technique and compared with simulations.
DOI: 10.1016/j.nima.2018.08.038
2019
Cited 8 times
Results on radiation tolerance of diamond detectors
In sight of the luminosity increase of the High Luminosity-LHC (HL-LHC), most experiments at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) are planning upgrades for their innermost layers in the next 5–10 years. These upgrades will require more radiation tolerant technologies than exist today. Usage of Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD) diamond as detector material is one of the potentially interesting technologies for the upgrade. CVD diamond has been used extensively in the beam condition monitors of BaBar, Belle, CDF and all LHC experiments. Measurements of the radiation tolerance of the highest quality polycrystalline CVD material for a range of proton energies, pions and neutrons obtained with this material are presented. In addition, new results on the evolution of various semiconductor parameters as a function of the dose rate are described.
DOI: 10.1016/j.nima.2015.09.079
2016
Cited 7 times
A 3D diamond detector for particle tracking
In the present study, results towards the development of a 3D diamond sensor are presented. Conductive channels are produced inside the sensor bulk using a femtosecond laser. This electrode geometry allows full charge collection even for low quality diamond sensors. Results from testbeam show that charge is collected by these electrodes. In order to understand the channel growth parameters, with the goal of producing low resistivity channels, the conductive channels produced with a different laser setup are evaluated by Raman spectroscopy.
DOI: 10.1002/pssa.201700162
2017
Cited 6 times
Description of Radiation Damage in Diamond Sensors Using an Effective Defect Model
The Beam Condition Monitoring Leakage (BCML) system is a beam monitoring device in the CMS experiment at the LHC consisting of 32 poly‐crystalline (pCVD) diamond sensors. The BCML sensors, located in rings around the beam, are exposed to high particle rates originating from the colliding beams. These particles cause lattice defects, which act as traps for the ionized charge carrier leading to a reduced charge collection efficiency (CCE). The radiation induced CCE degradation was, however, much more severe than expected from low rate laboratory measurements. Measurement and simulations presented in this paper show that this discrepancy is related to the rate of incident particles. At high particle rates, the trapping rate of the ionization is strongly increased compared to the detrapping rate leading to an increased build‐up of space charge. This space charge locally reduces the internal electric field increasing the trapping rate and hence reducing the CCE even further. In order to connect these macroscopic measurements with the microscopic defects acting as traps for the ionization charge, the TCAD simulation program SILVACO was used. It allows to introduce the defects as effective donor and acceptor levels, and can calculate the electric field from Transient Current Technique (TCT) signals and CCE as a function of the effective trap properties, like density, energy level, and trapping cross section. After each irradiation step, these properties were fitted to the data on the electric field from the TCT signals and CCE. Two effective acceptor and donor levels were needed to fit the data after each step. It turned out that the energy levels and cross sections could be kept constant and the trap density was proportional to the cumulative fluence of the irradiation steps. The highly non‐linear rate dependent diamond polarization and the resulting signal loss can be simulated using this effective defect model and is in agreement with the measurement results.
DOI: 10.1016/j.nima.2019.162675
2020
Cited 5 times
New test beam results of 3D and pad detectors constructed with poly-crystalline CVD diamond
We have measured the radiation tolerance of commercially available diamonds grown by the Chemical Vapor Deposition process by measuring the charge created by a 120 GeV hadron beam in a 50 µm pitch strip detector fabricated on each diamond sample before and after irradiation.We irradiated one group of samples with 70 MeV protons, a second group of samples with fast reactor neutrons (defined as energy greater than 0.1 MeV) and a third group of samples with 200 MeV pions, in steps, to (8.8 ± 0.9) × 10 15 protons/cm 2 , (1.43 ± 0.14) × 10 16 neutrons/cm 2 and (6.5 ± 0.5) × 10 14 pions/cm 2 respectively.By observing the charge induced due to the separation of electron-hole pairs created by the passage of the hadron beam through each sample, on an event-by-event basis, as a function of irradiation fluence, we conclude all data sets can be described by a first order damage equation and independently calculate the damage constant for 70 MeV protons, fast reactor neutrons and 200 MeV pions.We find the damage constant for diamond irradiated with 70 MeV protons to be 1.61 ± 0.07 (stat) ± 0.15 (syst) × 10 -18 cm 2 /(p µm), the damage constant for diamond irradiated with fast reactor neutrons to be 2.65 ± 0.13 (stat) ± 0.16 (syst) × 10 -18 cm 2 /(n µm) and the damage constant for diamond irradiated with 200 MeV pions to be 2.0 ± 0.2 (stat) ± 0.5 (syst) × 10 -18 cm 2 /(π µm).The damage constants from this measurement were analyzed together with our previously published 24 GeV proton irradiation and 800 MeV proton irradiation damage constant data to derive the first comprehensive set of relative damage constants for Chemical Vapor Deposition diamond.We find 70 MeV protons are 2.60 ± 0.27 times more damaging than 24 GeV protons, fast reactor neutrons are 4.27 ± 0.34 times more damaging than 24 GeV protons and 200 MeV pions are 3.2 ± 0.8 more damaging than 24 GeV protons.We also observe the measured data can be described by a universal damage curve for all proton, neutron and pion irradiations we have performed of Chemical Vapor Deposition diamond.Finally, we confirm the FWHM/MP ratio of the signal spectrum, a measure of the spatial uniformity of the collected charge, decreases with fluence for polycrystalline Chemical Vapor Deposition diamond and this effect can also be described by a universal curve.
DOI: 10.1016/j.nima.2015.11.044
2016
Cited 4 times
Monte Carlo simulations of the radiation environment for the CMS experiment
Monte Carlo radiation transport codes are used by the CMS Beam Radiation Instrumentation and Luminosity (BRIL) project to estimate the radiation levels due to proton–proton collisions and machine induced background. Results are used by the CMS collaboration for various applications: comparison with detector hit rates, pile-up studies, predictions of radiation damage based on various models (Dose, NIEL, DPA), shielding design, estimations of residual dose environment. Simulation parameters, and the maintenance of the input files are summarized, and key results are presented. Furthermore, an overview of additional programs developed by the BRIL project to meet the specific needs of CMS community is given.
DOI: 10.1016/j.phpro.2012.05.330
2012
Cited 4 times
The CMS Beam Conditions and Radiation Monitoring System
The Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) is one of the two large, general purpose experiments situated at the LHC at CERN. As with all high energy physics experiments, knowledge of the beam conditions and luminosity is of vital importance. The Beam Conditions and Radiation Monitoring System (BRM) is installed in CMS to protect the detector and to provide feedback to LHC on beam conditions. It is composed of several sub-systems that measure the radiation level close to or inside all sub-detectors, monitor the beam halo conditions with different time resolution, support beam tuning and protect CMS in case of adverse beam conditions by firing a beam abort signal. This paper presents three of the BRM subsystems: the Fast Beam Conditions Monitor (BCM1F), which is designed for fast flux monitoring, measuring with nanosecond time resolution, both the beam halo and collision products; the Beam Scintillator Counters (BSC), that provide hit rates and time information of beam halo and collision products; and the Beam Conditions Monitors (BCM) used as a protection system that can trigger a beam dump when beam losses occur in order to prevent damage to the pixel and tracker detectors. A description of the systems and a characterization on the basis of data collected during LHC operation is presented.
DOI: 10.1088/1748-0221/8/02/p02004
2013
Cited 4 times
Measurement of the bulk leakage current of silicon sensors of the CMS Preshower after an integrated luminosity of 6.17 fb<sup>−1</sup>, at √s = 7 TeV
The CMS Preshower is part of the CMS Electromagnetic Calorimeter (ECAL) system. It is a sampling calorimeter that was installed to improve ?0 rejection in the forward direction. It is composed of two layers of lead, each followed by a layer of silicon sensors. The Preshower is installed at each end of CMS, at about ?310 cm from the CMS interaction point. The sensors are exposed to a wide spectrum of ionizing and non-ionizing radiation, causing an increase of the bulk leakage current and a change of the effective doping concentration, resulting in a change of the full depletion voltage.This paper presents the measurements of the bulk current increase from the 2010 and 2011 LHC runs, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 6.17 fb?1, including luminosity taken outside stable beam conditions, at a centre-of-mass energy of 7 TeV.A computer program based on the Hamburg model was developed for calculating the effects of simultaneous irradiation and annealing on the bulk leakage currents. The calculated currents, as a function of time, were found to be in good agreement with the bulk leakage currents measured in 2011. The program will be used to estimate the long-term evolution of the bulk leakage currents. The absolute level of the bulk leakage current, and its radial dependence, is in good agreement with the predictions obtained with the Hamburg model folded with the FLUKA simulation of the CMS radiation field.
DOI: 10.1016/j.nima.2016.06.028
2017
Cited 4 times
Instrumentation for beam radiation and luminosity measurement in the CMS experiment using novel detector technologies
The higher energy and luminosity of the LHC initiated the development of dedicated technologies for radiation monitoring and luminosity measurement. A dedicated pixelated luminosity detector measures coincidences in several three-layer telescopes of silicon pixel detectors to arrive at a luminosity for each colliding LHC bunch pair. In addition, charged particle tracking allows to monitor the location of the collision point. The upgraded fast beam conditions monitor measures the particle flux using 24 two-pad single crystalline diamond sensors, equipped with a fast front-end ASIC produced in 130 nm CMOS technology. The excellent time resolution is used to separate collision products from machine induced background. A new beam-halo monitor at larger radius exploits Cherenkov light produced by relativistic charged particles in fuzed quartz crystals to provide direction sensitivity and time resolution to separate incoming and outgoing particles. The back-end electronics of the beam monitoring systems includes dedicated modules with high bandwidth digitizers developed in both VME and microTCA standards for per bunch beam measurements and gain monitoring. All new and upgraded sub-detectors have been taking data from the first day of LHC operation in April 2015. Results on their commissioning and essential characteristics using data since the start-up of LHC will be presented.
DOI: 10.1109/nssmic.2011.6153979
2011
Cited 4 times
The performance of the Beam Conditions and Radiation Monitoring System of CMS
The Beam Conditions and Radiation Monitoring System (BRM), is installed in CMS to protect the CMS detector from high beam losses and to provide feedback to the LHC and CMS on the beam conditions. The primary detector subsystems are based on either single crystal diamond sensors (BCM1F) for particle counting with nanosecond resolution or on polycrystalline diamonds (BCM2; BCM1L) for integrated signal current measurements. Beam scintillation counters (BSC) are also used during low luminosity running. The detectors have radiation hard front-end electronics and are read out independently of the CMS central data acquisition and are online whenever there is beam in the LHC machine. The various sub-systems exploit different time resolutions and position locations to be able to monitor the beam induced backgrounds and the flux of particles produced during collisions. This paper describes the CMS BRM system and the complementary aspects of the installed BRM sub-detectors to measure both single particle count rates and signal currents originating from beam backgrounds and collision products in CMS.
DOI: 10.1016/j.nima.2018.11.071
2019
Cited 4 times
The new Fast Beam Condition Monitor using poly-crystalline diamond sensors for luminosity measurement at CMS
The Fast Beam Condition Monitor (BCM1F) is used in CMS to measure beam induced background and precision luminosity. The system in its current implementation was first installed in 2014, equipped with single-crystalline (sCVD) diamond sensors. After some radiation damage, erratic occurrence of HV instabilities required lowering of the operational HV and the system became inefficient, resulting in unstable measurements. The system was replaced in 2017 with poly-crystalline (pCVD) diamond sensors and silicon (Si) sensors. Both new sensor types show significantly better operational stability. The luminosity performance of pCVD and Si based luminosity measurement is discussed.
DOI: 10.22323/1.213.0346
2015
Cited 3 times
Upgraded Fast Beam Conditions Monitor for CMS online luminosity measurement
The CMS beam and radiation monitoring subsystem BCM1F during LHC Run I consisted of 8 individual diamond sensors situated around the beam pipe within the tracker detector volume, for the purpose of fast monitoring of beam background and collision products. Effort is ongoing to develop the use of BCM1F as an online bunch-by-bunch luminosity monitor. BCM1F will be running whenever there is beam in LHC, and its data acquisition is independent from the data acquisition of the CMS detector, hence it delivers luminosity even when CMS is not taking data. To prepare for the expected increase in the LHC luminosity and the change from 50 ns to 25 ns bunch separation, several changes to the system are required, including a higher number of sensors and upgraded electronics. In particular, a new real-time digitizer with large memory was developed and is being integrated into a multi-subsystem framework for luminosity measurement. Current results from Run II preparation will be shown, including results from the January 2014 test beam. Presented at TIPP2014 3rd International Conference on Technology and Instrumentation in Particle Physics, Upgraded Fast Beam Conditions Monitor for CMS online luminosity measurement Jessica Lynn Leonard*, Maria Hempel†, Hans Henschel, Olena Karacheban, Wolfgang Lange, Wolfgang Lohmann†, Roberval Walsh DESY Zeuthen, Germany E-mail:jessica.lynn.leonard@desy.de, maria.hempel@desy.de, hans.henschel@desy.de, olena.karacheban@desy.de, wolfgang.lange@desy.de, wolfgang.lohmann@desy.de, roberval.walsh@desy.de Anne Dabrowski, Vladimir Ryjov CERN Geneva, Switzerland E-mail: anne.evelyn.dabrowski@cern.ch, vladimir.ryjov@cern.ch David Stickland Princeton University Princeton, New Jersey, USA E-mail: david.peter.stickland@cern.ch The CMS beam and radiation monitoring subsystem BCM1F during LHC Run I consisted of 8 individual diamond sensors situated around the beam pipe within the tracker detector volume, for the purpose of fast monitoring of beam background and collision products. Effort is ongoing to develop the use of BCM1F as an online bunch-by-bunch luminosity monitor. BCM1F will be running whenever there is beam in LHC, and its data acquisition is independent from the data acquisition of the CMS detector, hence it delivers luminosity even when CMS is not taking data. To prepare for the expected increase in the LHC luminosity and the change from 50 ns to 25 ns bunch separation, several changes to the system are required, including a higher number of sensors and upgraded electronics. In particular, a new real-time digitizer with large memory was developed and is being integrated into a multi-subsystem framework for luminosity measurement. Current results from Run II preparation will be discussed, including results from the January 2014 test beam. Technology and Instrumentation in Particle Physics 2014 2-6 June, 2014 Amsterdam, the Netherlands * Speaker † Also at Brandenburg Technical University, Cottbus, Germany  Copyright owned by the author(s) under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike Licence. http://pos.sissa.it BCM1F for CMS online luminosity Jessica Lynn Leonard 1. Overview of BCM1F The CMS Fast Beam Condition Monitor (BCM1F)[1] provides bunch-by-bunch information on the flux of beam halo and collision products passing through the inner CMS detector[2]. The system was originally designed to monitor the condition of the beam to ensure low enough tracker occupancy for data-taking. However, BCM1F's purpose has evolved to include fast measurement of luminosity in order to function as an online luminometer.
DOI: 10.18429/jacow-ipac2017-tupva032
2017
Cited 3 times
Beam-Gas Background Observations at LHC
DOI: 10.1117/12.2076023
2014
The fast beam condition monitor BCM1F backend electronics upgraded MicroTCA-based architecture
The Beam Radiation Instrumentation and Luminosity Project of the CMS experiment, consists of several beam monitoring systems. One system, the upgraded Fast Beams Condition Monitor, is based on 24 single crystal CVD diamonds with a double-pad sensor metallization and a custom designed readout. Signals for real-time monitoring are transmitted to the counting room, where they are received and processed by new back-end electronics designed to extract information on LHC collision, beam induced background and activation products. The Slow Control Driver is designed for the front-end electronics configuration and control. The system architecture and the upgrade status will be presented.
DOI: 10.22323/1.449.0604
2023
Radiation qualification of thermal interface materials for detector cooling.
Silicon sensor based particle detectors operated in a hadronic radiation environment need to be cooled to counteract the radiation induced leakage current and to prevent thermal runaway. To achieve this most efficiently, a low thermal resistance is required between the detector modules and the cooling structures. In many cases dry thermal contacts are sufficient, but especially for a large-area contact so-called thermal interface materials (TIM), largely availably on the market in many forms, are the preferred choice. However, in the use case for detector cooling there can be many requirements, such as non-liquid phase, no heat cure, low thermal impedance, no compression force, radiation hardness, making it challenging to find a suitable TIM. One option are room temperature curing two component thermal gap fillers. The thermal test setup determines the thermal conductivity of a test sample by measuring the temperature gradient with a controlled amount of heat flow through a sample. Mechanical tests are required to qualify the structural integrity of the thermal interface under thermal stress and mechanical stress. Resembling the style of an ISO 4587 lap shear test, and an ISO 25217 mode-1 fracture test, test samples were prepared with a large 5 $\times$ 5 cm$^2$ adhesion overlap using plasma cleaned carbon fibre plates to have a surface comparable to its intended use case. After testing of unirradiated samples, they have been irradiated to 600 kGy. The measured mechanical and thermal properties are presented and the results before and after irradiation are compared.
DOI: 10.22323/1.314.0516
2017
Diamond Detector Technology: Status and Perspectives
The planned upgrade of the LHC to the High-Luminosity-LHC will push the luminosity limits above the original design values. Since the current detectors will not be able to cope with this environment ATLAS and CMS are doing research to find more radiation tolerant technologies for their innermost tracking layers. Chemical Vapour Deposition (CVD) diamond is an excellent candidate for this purpose. Detectors out of this material are already established in the highest irradiation regimes for the beam condition monitors at LHC. The RD42 collaboration is leading an effort to use CVD diamonds also as sensor material for the future tracking detectors. The signal behaviour of highly irradiated diamonds is presented as well as the recent study of the signal dependence on incident particle flux. There is also a recent development towards 3D detectors and especially 3D detectors with a pixel readout based on diamond sensors.
DOI: 10.22323/1.340.0597
2019
Latest Results on Radiation Tolerance of Diamond Detectors
At present most experiments at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) are planning upgrades in the next 5-10 years for their innermost tracking layers as well as luminosity monitors to be able to take data as the luminosity increases and CERN moves toward the High Luminosity-LHC (HL-LHC). These upgrades will most likely require more radiation tolerant technologies than exist today. As a result this is one area of intense research, and Chemical Vapour Deposition (CVD) diamond is one such technology. CVD diamond has been used extensively in beam condition monitors as the innermost detectors in the highest radiation areas of all LHC experiments. This talk describes the preliminary radiation tolerance measurements of the highest quality polycrystalline CVD material for a range of proton energies and neutrons obtained with this material with the goal of elucidating the issues that should be addressed for future diamond based detectors. The talk presents the evolution of various semiconductor parameters as a function of dose.
2014
Performance and perspectives of the diamond based Beam Condition Monitor for beam loss monitoring at CMS
At CMS, a beam loss monitoring system is operated to protect the silicon detectors from high particle rates, arising from intense beam loss events. As detectors, poly-crystalline CVD diamond sensors are placed around the beam pipe at several locations inside CMS. In case of extremely high detector currents, the LHC beams are automatically extracted from the LHC rings.Diamond is the detector material of choice due to its radiation hardness. Predictions of the detector lifetime were made based on FLUKA monte-carlo simulations and irradiation test results from the RD42 collaboration, which attested no significant radiation damage over several years.During the LHC operational Run1 (2010 ?? 2013), the detector efficiencies were monitored. A signal decrease of about 50 times stronger than expectations was observed in the in-situ radiation environment. Electric field deformations due to charge carriers, trapped in radiation induced lattice defects, are responsible for this signal decrease. This so-called polarization effect is rate dependent and results in a non-linearity of the detector response. Measurements using the transient current technique reveal the electric field distribution. Online measurements and laboratory analysis of polarization effects in diamond sensors are presented.In the scope of the HL-LHC upgrade, various changes are foreseen. Perspectives for upgrades of the detector electronics are presented. Different candidates for sensor technologies are tested for their performance in a high rate, highly damaging radiation environment.
DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.1604.08583
2016
Enabling Technologies for Silicon Microstrip Tracking Detectors at the HL-LHC
While the tracking detectors of the ATLAS and CMS experiments have shown excellent performance in Run 1 of LHC data taking, and are expected to continue to do so during LHC operation at design luminosity, both experiments will have to exchange their tracking systems when the LHC is upgraded to the high-luminosity LHC (HL-LHC) around the year 2024. The new tracking systems need to operate in an environment in which both the hit densities and the radiation damage will be about an order of magnitude higher than today. In addition, the new trackers need to contribute to the first level trigger in order to maintain a high data-taking efficiency for the interesting processes. Novel detector technologies have to be developed to meet these very challenging goals. The German groups active in the upgrades of the ATLAS and CMS tracking systems have formed a collaborative "Project on Enabling Technologies for Silicon Microstrip Tracking Detectors at the HL-LHC" (PETTL), which was supported by the Helmholtz Alliance "Physics at the Terascale" during the years 2013 and 2014. The aim of the project was to share experience and to work together on key areas of mutual interest during the R&amp;D phase of these upgrades. The project concentrated on five areas, namely exchange of experience, radiation hardness of silicon sensors, low mass system design, automated precision assembly procedures, and irradiations. This report summarizes the main achievements.
2016
TCT closure test in physics
2016
Tertiary collimator closure test in physics
DOI: 10.22323/1.234.0288
2016
Test Beam Results of a 3D Diamond Detector
3D pixel technology has been used successfully in the past with silicon detectors for tracking applications.Recently, a first prototype of the same 3D technology has been produced on a chemical vapour deposited single-crystal diamond sensor.This device has been subsequently tested in a beam test at CERN's SPS accelerator in a beam of 120 GeV protons.Details on the production and results of testbeam data are presented.
2015
The CMS/TOTEM nominal FLUKA Model; version 1.0.0.0
DOI: 10.22323/1.213.0281
2015
Performance and perspectives of the diamond based Beam Condition Monitor for beam loss monitoring at CMS
2013
Diamond Sensors in HEP
DOI: 10.22323/1.287.0027
2017
Diamond detector technology: status and perspectives
The status of material development of poly-crystalline chemical vapor deposition (CVD) diamond is presented. We also present beam test results on the independence of signal size on incident particle rate in charged particle detectors based on un-irradiated and irradiated poly-crystalline CVD diamond over a range of particle fluxes from 2 kHz/cm$^2$ to 10 MHz/cm$^2$. The pulse height of the sensors was measured with readout electronics with a peaking time of 6 ns. In addition the first beam test results from 3D detectors made with poly-crystalline CVD diamond are presented. Finally the first analysis of LHC data from the ATLAS Diamond Beam Monitor (DBM) which is based on pixelated poly-crystalline CVD diamond sensors bump-bonded to pixel readout electronics is shown.
DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.1910.07621
2019
Recent Results from Polycrystalline CVD Diamond Detectors
Diamond is a material in use at many nuclear and high energy facilities due to its inherent radiation tolerance and ease of use. We have characterized detectors based on chemical vapor deposition (CVD) diamond before and after proton irradiation. We present preliminary results of the spatial resolution of unirradiated and irradiated CVD diamond strip sensors. In addition, we measured the pulse height versus particle rate of unirradiated and irradiated polycrystalline CVD (pCVD) diamond pad detectors up to a particle flux of $20\,\mathrm{MHz/cm^2}$ and a fluence up to $4 \times 10^{15}\,n/\mathrm{cm^2}$.
DOI: 10.22323/1.367.0080
2019
Beam test results of 3D pixel detectors constructed with poly-crystalline CVD diamond
As a possible candidate for extremely radiation tolerant tracking devices we present a novel detector design - namely 3D detectors - based on poly-crystalline CVD diamond sensors with a pixel readout. The fabrication of recent 3D detectors as well their results in recent beam tests are presented. We measured the hit efficiency and signal response of two 3D diamond detectors with 50 × 50 μm cell sizes using pixel readout chip technologies currently used at CMS and ATLAS. In all runs, both devices attained efficiencies >98 % in a normal incident test beam of minimum ionising particles. The highest efficiency observed during the beam tests was 99.2 %.
DOI: 10.22323/1.367.0079
2019
Latest Results on the Radiation Tolerance of Diamond Detectors
We have measured the radiation tolerance of chemical vapor deposition (CVD) diamond against protons and neutrons.The relative radiation damage constant of 24 GeV protons, 800 MeV protons, 70 MeV protons, and fast reactor neutrons is presented.The results are used to combine the measured data into a universal damage curve for diamond material.