Abstract

The harsh radiation environment, in which detectors will have to operate during the high luminosity phase of the Large Hadron Collider, represents a crucial challenge for many calorimeter technologies. In the Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) forward calorimeters, ionizing doses and hadron fluences will reach up to 300 kGy (at a dose rate of 30 Gy/h) and ${2\times 10^{14} cm^{-2}}$ , respectively, at the pseudorapidity region of $\vert \eta \vert $ = 2.6. To evaluate the evolution of the CMS electromagnetic calorimeter performance in such conditions, a set of PbWO4 crystals, which had previously been exposed to 24 GeV protons up to integrated fluences between ${2.1\times 10^{13} cm^{-2}}$ and ${1.3\times 10^{14} cm^{-2}}$ , has been studied in beam tests. A degradation of the energy resolution and a nonlinear response to electron showers are observed in damaged crystals. Direct measurements of the light output from the crystals show the amplitude decreasing and pulse becoming faster as the fluence increases. The evolution of the performance of the PbWO4 crystals has been well understood and parameterized in terms of increasing light absorption inside the crystal volume. A double-sided readout configuration, in which two identical photodetectors are coupled to the opposite ends of each crystal, has also been tested. The separate and simultaneous readout of the light from the two sides of the crystal allows us to correct for longitudinal shower fluctuations and to mitigate the degradation of energy resolution in highly damaged crystals. The nonlinear response to electromagnetic showers, arising from high nonuniformity of light collection efficiency along the longitudinal axis of irradiated crystals, can also be corrected by means of the double-sided readout technique.

Highlights

  • The CMS electromagnetic calorimeter (ECAL) [1] is designed to provide hermetic coverage within the pseudorapidity region |η| < 3.0

  • The High Luminosity phase of the LHC (HL-LHC) upgrade to the LHC accelerator places new demands on the LHC experiments, which must retain good performance in order to harness the large datasets for physics that the HL-LHC operating period will provide

  • For the CMS ECAL, the evolution of the light output of the PbWO4 crystals must be established, to predict their performance at HL-LHC. This has been achieved by means of beam tests and Monte Carlo simulations of irradiated crystals

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The CMS electromagnetic calorimeter (ECAL) [1] is designed to provide hermetic coverage within the pseudorapidity region |η| < 3.0. The ECAL is crucial for the identification and reconstruction of photons and electrons, important for the planned HL-LHC (High Luminosity Large Hadron Collider) physics program. The CMS electromagnetic calorimeter is a homogeneous calorimeter made of 75 848 lead tungstate (PbWO4) scintillating crystals, located inside the CMS superconducting solenoid magnet [1,2,3]. It is made of a barrel part covering the region of pseudorapidity |η| < 1.48 and two endcaps, which extend the coverage up to |η| = 3.0. The longevity of the ECAL PbWO4 crystals has been examined by means of beam tests results conducted on irradiated crystals, and these will be presented below

EFFECT OF LHC IRRADIATION ON PBWO4 CRYSTAL
DOUBLE-READOUT BEAM TEST RESULTS ON IRRADIATED PBWO4 CRYSTALS
DRO Test Beam
CONCLUSION
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