A Time Projection Chamber for High-Rate Experiments: Towards an Upgrade of the ALICE TPC
Bernhard Ketzer (for the GEM-TPC, ALICE TPC Collaborations)

TL;DR
This paper discusses the development and testing of a GEM-based Time Projection Chamber (TPC) designed for high-rate experiments like the upgraded ALICE detector at CERN, focusing on ion backflow suppression, calibration, and improved resolution.
Contribution
It introduces a large-volume GEM-TPC prototype and demonstrates its capabilities for high-rate operation, including ion backflow control and calibration techniques, advancing TPC technology for future collider experiments.
Findings
GEM-TPC prototype shows effective ion backflow suppression.
Calibration techniques enable correction of space charge distortions.
Achieved improved spatial and momentum resolution in tests.
Abstract
A Time Projection Chamber (TPC) is a powerful detector for 3-dimensional tracking and particle identification for ultra-high multiplicity events. It is the central tracking device of many experiments, e.g. the ALICE experiment at CERN. The necessity of a switching electrostatic gate, which prevents ions produced in the amplification region o MWPCs from entering the drift volume, however, restricts its application to trigger rates of the order of 1 kHz. Charge amplification by Gas Electron Multiplier (GEM) foils instead of proportional wires offers an intrinsic suppression of the ion backflow, although not to the same level as a gating grid. Detailed Monte Carlo simulations have shown that the distortions due to residual space charge from back-drifting ions can be limited to a few cm, and thus can be corrected using standard calibration techniques. A prototype GEM-TPC has been built…
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