- Hoch, N;
- Seidel, O;
- Chirayath, VA;
- Enriquez, AB;
- Gramellini, E;
- Guenette, R;
- Jaidee, IW;
- Keefe, K;
- Kohani, S;
- Kubota, S;
- Mahdy, H;
- McDonald, AD;
- Mei, Y;
- Miao, P;
- Newcomer, FM;
- Nygren, D;
- Parmaksiz, I;
- Rooks, M;
- Tzoka, I;
- Wei, W-Z;
- Asaadi, J;
- Battat, JBR
Abstract:
We report measurements of the transverse diffusion of
electrons in P-10 gas (90% Ar, 10% CH4) in a laboratory-scale
time projection chamber (TPC) utilizing a novel pixelated signal
capture and digitization technique known as Q-Pix. The Q-Pix method
incorporates a precision switched integrating transimpedance
amplifier whose output is compared to a threshold voltage. Upon
reaching the threshold, a comparator sends a 'reset' signal,
initiating a discharge of the integrating capacitor. The time
difference between successive resets is inversely proportional to
the average current at the pixel in that time interval, and the
number of resets is directly proportional to the total collected
charge. We developed a 16-channel Q-Pix prototype fabricated from
commercial off-the-shelf components and coupled them to 16
concentric annular anode electrodes to measure the spatial extent of
the electron swarm that reaches the anode after drifting through the
uniform field of the TPC. The swarm is produced at a gold
photocathode using pulsed UV light. The measured transverse
diffusion agrees with simulations in PyBoltz across a range of
operating pressures (200–1500 Torr). These results demonstrate
that a Q-Pix readout can successfully reconstruct the ionization
topology in a TPC.