1 / 15

COUPP-60 NuMI Commissioning

COUPP-60 NuMI Commissioning. Andrew Sonnenschein All Experimenters Meeting, Oct 18, 2010. Searching for Dark Matter with Bubble Chambers (COUPP).

marin
Download Presentation

COUPP-60 NuMI Commissioning

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. COUPP-60 NuMI Commissioning Andrew Sonnenschein All Experimenters Meeting, Oct 18, 2010

  2. Searching for Dark Matter with Bubble Chambers (COUPP) Exploit physics of bubble nucleation to discriminate against background gammas and alphas: successful 2009 run of small chamber demonstrated potential to reach zero background. Scalable: 60-kg being commissioned now; 500-kg and 16-ton (DUSEL) versions under discussion. MSSM Physics reach for spin-dependent Weakly Interacting Massive Particle (WIMP) interactions on protons– COUPP is now sensitivity leader in this channel, will soon probe SUSY models Neutron scattering background event in 4-kg chamber Construction of 60-kg chamber

  3. COUPP-60 Commissioning • Ran from July 28 to August 30 • Goal: Test fully operating detector before moving to Snolab • Stability of mechanical systems, DAQ, photography • Backgrounds due to internal radioactivity • Analysis in progress, rates appear to be low. • Acoustic alpha/ nuclear recoil discrimination • Earlier talk by Eric Dahl (Aug. 16) is on All Experimenter’s Meeting web site. • Run ended Aug. 30 due to a combination of problems that will be discussed in following slides. • Bottom line: some of the problems are quite serious– significant work needed before move to Snolab. This talk

  4. The Easier Stuff • Rust on outside of stainless pressure vessel. • Damage is superficial so far, due to limited time under water. Causes mostly evident and easy to correct (a few non-stainless items in a system which should be 100% stainless steel, small stainless parts not properly cleaned and passivated). • Leaks in pressure vessel and inner vessel fill plumbing. • Repairs in progress. Tightening bolts has reduced or eliminated pressure vessel leak. • Control system– minor software issues. • DAQ- need to change operating system on digitizer crate to improve driver support. • Vibrations. Unexpected vibrations of outer and inner vessels. May cause excess noise in acoustic sensors, possible surface bubble nucleation. • May need to add isolation materials.

  5. Uneven lighting, hard shadows Shadows- a challenge for image analysis software 5 bubbles (neutron multiple scatter) 6th bubble- harder to see due to uneven lighting Dark region at bottom, poor photography, poor triggering

  6. Photography and Illumination Scheme • Illumination is provided by 2 optical fibers (only 1 shown below for illustration). • Small number of point-like light sources cast hard shadows and give poor uniformity. • We need a larger number of light sources, better pointing and diffusion. LED BOX Propylene Glycol Inner Vessel Superheated CF3I GLASS PRESSURE WINDOW diffuser Scotchlite Reflector OPTICAL FIBER BUNDLE CAMERA bubble shadow

  7. Bright Spots Bright Spot Appears in Camera 0 Image After Filling. Shape changes as chamber pressure is cycled.

  8. Cause of Bright Spots: Broken Glue Joint Between Lenses and Pressure Window PLANOCONCAVE LENS BONDED TO PRESSURE VESSEL WINDOW WITH OPTICAL EPOXY LENS PULLS AWAY FROM WINDOW WHEN PRESSURIZED CAMERA DEPRESSURIZED PRESSURIZED 0.015 inches

  9. Excess Bubbling at Water/ CF3I Interface • Problem has existed at some level in all COUPP chambers, but COUPP-60 is the worst. • Cause is unknown. • Ideas: Dissolved gas in water or particulate floating on interface. • Consequence is reduction in live time fraction due to 30-60 second compression cycle after each detected bubble. Live fraction reduced to 25% at 40 degrees C. CF3I/ water interface

  10. Darkening of Video Images • Progressive from beginning of run. • Eventually made data taking impossible • Cause was a mystery until we viewed the chamber with white light… Average Pixel Intensity

  11. CF3I Is Decomposing and Changing Color Color change indicates the presence of free iodine (I2) dissolved in chamber liquids. Iodine dissolved in water (orange) “ring around the collar” near water/ CF3I interface. Solid material? Bubbles? Could be cause of surface boiling? Iodine dissolved in CF3I (purple) Photo by Raidar Hahn

  12. Photodissociation of CF3I Light Absorption by CF3I • Destruction of CF3I molecule by light is well measured at UV wavelengths. • Produces free iodine by E.g. 2g + CF3I -> C2F6 + I2 • We have seen this before in samples exposed to ambient light, but not with red light illumination. Solomon et al., 1994

  13. Possible Causes of CF3I Decomposition • A light leak? So far we know that • Light tightness of the camera package : <10-4 of ambient light levels. • Some light from two green (530 nm) “power on” LEDs on the back of the video cameras. • We are exposing samples to a green LED now– should soon know if this is the problem. • Incompatibility with chamber materials? Gold O-ring? • Gold wire used for stainless to quartz seal for the first time in this chamber. Tests in 2006 at U. Chicago did not see any problems, but may not have been sensitive enough. • Chemical impurities in CF3I? • This is a new batch and analysis indicates purity level is less than what we had in the past. • If this is the problem, it should also show up in recently started Snolab run which was filled from same batch of CF3I.

  14. New Safety Issues • In principle, a number of hazardous substances can be produced by reactions between CF3I and H2O (HF, HI, I2, COF2). • Likely not present in significant quantity and should not be released from system. Confined space entry procedures for work on bubble chamber inside water shield tank Forced air ventilation Full face respirator with organic vapor/ acid filter Chemical hazard suit to protect from acidified water leaks

  15. Next Steps • PPD has formed a COUPP-60 Task Force to help us call on appropriate resources. • Working groups: Optics/Illumination, Chemistry, Mechanical/Operations. Core group from collaboration will be supplemented as necessary by outside experts. • Key issue is access to chemistry expertise, which is in short supply at Fermilab. Collaborators at Indiana University are analyzing samples by GC/MS. Argonne has expertise in Chemical Sciences and Engineering Division which we have started to tap. • We are recovering samples of gases and fluids from bubble chamber. Analysis of decomposition products may suggest mechanism. • Will attempt to reproduce the problem in a test tube. If this is a light exposure problem, we should know soon. • In parallel, we can make progress on better understood optics and mechanical issues.

More Related