RPC detectors play a crucial role in triggering events containing muons in the central region of the ATLAS experiment. In view of the High-Luminosity LHC program, the existing RPC system, consisting of six independent concentric cylindrical detector layers each providing a full space time localization of hits, is currently facing a significant upgrade. In the next few years, 306 triplets of new generation RPCs will be installed in the innermost region of the ATLAS Muon Barrel Spectrometer, increasing from 6 to 9 the number of tracking layers, doubling the trigger lever arm. This allows a substantial enhancement of the present trigger redundancy, increasing the geometrical acceptance from 78% to 96% approximately. The new chamber design is based on a very efficient integration of an innovative front-end electronics within the detector Faraday cage, allowing to operate the RPCs with an order of magnitude lower of average charge per count, correspondingly increasing rate capability and longevity. Fitting new chambers in the narrow space left in ATLAS inner barrel was a challenge,achieved by optimizing RPC materials and thickness, featuring a 1 mm gas gap (instead of 2 mm), and 1.4 mm resistive electrodes (instead of 1.8 mm). Both sides of RPCs are readout by strip panels oriented to measure the bending coordinate of the muon spectrometer, while the second coordinate is reconstructed from the difference of the propagation time. To achieve such results, a 100 ps precise TDC has been integrated in the front-end electronics ASIC. The expected time resolution of a single 1 mm RPC gas gap is approximately 300 ps, and the possibility of a stand-alone Time-of-Flight measurement will have a huge impact on ATLAS searches for massive long-lived particles. An overview and the present status of the ATLAS RPC Phase II project will be presented.
Camarri, P. (2025). The ATLAS RPC Phase-II upgrade for high-luminosity LHC era. NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH. SECTION A, ACCELERATORS, SPECTROMETERS, DETECTORS AND ASSOCIATED EQUIPMENT, 1078 [10.1016/j.nima.2025.170590].
The ATLAS RPC Phase-II upgrade for high-luminosity LHC era
Camarri, Paolo
2025-01-01
Abstract
RPC detectors play a crucial role in triggering events containing muons in the central region of the ATLAS experiment. In view of the High-Luminosity LHC program, the existing RPC system, consisting of six independent concentric cylindrical detector layers each providing a full space time localization of hits, is currently facing a significant upgrade. In the next few years, 306 triplets of new generation RPCs will be installed in the innermost region of the ATLAS Muon Barrel Spectrometer, increasing from 6 to 9 the number of tracking layers, doubling the trigger lever arm. This allows a substantial enhancement of the present trigger redundancy, increasing the geometrical acceptance from 78% to 96% approximately. The new chamber design is based on a very efficient integration of an innovative front-end electronics within the detector Faraday cage, allowing to operate the RPCs with an order of magnitude lower of average charge per count, correspondingly increasing rate capability and longevity. Fitting new chambers in the narrow space left in ATLAS inner barrel was a challenge,achieved by optimizing RPC materials and thickness, featuring a 1 mm gas gap (instead of 2 mm), and 1.4 mm resistive electrodes (instead of 1.8 mm). Both sides of RPCs are readout by strip panels oriented to measure the bending coordinate of the muon spectrometer, while the second coordinate is reconstructed from the difference of the propagation time. To achieve such results, a 100 ps precise TDC has been integrated in the front-end electronics ASIC. The expected time resolution of a single 1 mm RPC gas gap is approximately 300 ps, and the possibility of a stand-alone Time-of-Flight measurement will have a huge impact on ATLAS searches for massive long-lived particles. An overview and the present status of the ATLAS RPC Phase II project will be presented.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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