27 February 2017 to 3 March 2017
Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics
Asia/Novosibirsk timezone

The construction technique of high granularity and high transparency Drift Chambers for the MEG II upgrade

28 Feb 2017, 09:45
20m
Contributed Oral Tracking and vertex detectors Tracking and vertex detectors

Speaker

Dr Giovanni Francesco Tassielli (INFN Lecce & University of Salento)

Description

The MEG experiment searches for the charged lepton flavor violating decay, $\mu^{+}\rightarrow$ $e^{+}\gamma$. MEG has already determined the world best upper limit on the branching ratio $BR<4.2\times10^{-13}$@90%CL. An upgrade of the whole detector has been approved to obtain a substantial increase in sensitivity. Currently MEG is in upgrade phases, this phase involves all the detectors. The new positron tracker is a single volume, full stereo, small cells drift chamber(DC) co-axial to the beam line. It is composed of 10 concentric layers and each single drift cell is approximately square $7~mm$ side, with a $20~\mu$m gold plated W sense wire surrounded by $40~\mu$m and $50~\mu$m silver plated Al field wires in a ratio of 5:1, about $12,000$ wires. Due to the high wire density ($12 wires/cm^{2}$), the use of the classical feed-through technique as wire anchoring system could hardly be implemented and therefore it was necessary to develop new wiring strategies. The number of wires and the stringent requirements on the precision of their position and on the uniformity of the wire mechanical tension impose the use of an automatic system to operate the wiring procedures. This wiring robot, designed and built at the INFN Lecce and University of Salento laboratories, consists of: - a semiautomatic wiring machine with a high precision on wire mechanical tensioning (better than $0.5~g$) and on wire positioning ($20~\mu$m) for simultaneous wiring of multiwire layers; - a contact-less infrared laser soldering tool; - an automatic handling system for storing and transporting the multi-wire layers. The drift chamber is currently under construction at INFN and should be completed by the end of summer 2017 to be then delivered to PSI for commissioning.

Primary authors

Mr Gianluigi Chiarello (INFN Lecce) Dr Giovanni Francesco Tassielli (INFN Lecce &amp; University of Salento)

Co-authors

Dr Alessandro Corvaglia (INFN Lecce) Mrs Aurora Pepino (INFN Lecce - Università del Salento) Mr Carlo Pinto (INFN Lecce - Università del Salento) Prof. Franco Grancagnolo (INFN Lecce) Dr Giuseppe Cocciolo (INFN Lecce) Prof. Marco Panareo (INFN Lecce) Mr Matteo spedicato (INFN Lecce - Università del Salento) Mr alessandro miccoli (INFN Lecce) Dr claudio chiri (INFN Lecce)

Presentation Materials