Innovative design and construction technique for the Cylindrical GEM detector for the BESIII experiment
A. Amoroso, M. Alexeev, R. Baldini Ferroli, M. Bertani, D. Bettoni, F., Bianchi, A. Calcaterra, N. Canale, M. Capodiferro, V. Carassiti, S. Cerioni,, JY. Chai, S. Chiozzi, G. Cibinetto, F. Cossio, A. Cotta Ramusino, F. De Mori,, M. Destefanis, J. Dong, F. Evangelisti

TL;DR
This paper introduces an innovative construction technique for a cylindrical Gas Electron Multiplier (GEM) detector designed for the BESIII experiment, emphasizing low material impact and precise geometry for high-energy physics applications.
Contribution
It presents a novel construction method using Rohacell foam and permaglass rings for a large-area, cylindrical GEM detector with improved readout and mechanical precision.
Findings
Successful realization of a prototype CGEM detector
Validation of the construction technique through initial tests
Enhanced detector performance with minimized capacitance
Abstract
Gas detector are very light instrument used in high energy physics to measure the particle properties: position and momentum. Through high electric field is possible to use the Gas Electron Multiplier (GEM) technology to detect the particles and to exploit the its properties to construct a large area detector, such as the new IT for BESIII. The state of the art in the GEM production allow to create very large area GEM foils (up to 50x100 cm2) and thanks to the small thickness of these foil is it possible to shape it to the desired form: a Cylindrical Gas Electron Multiplier (CGEM) is then proposed. The innovative construction technique based on Rohacell, a PMI foam, will give solidity to cathode and anode with a very low impact on material budget. The entire detector is sustained by permaglass rings glued at the edges. These rings are use to assembly the CGEM together with a dedicated…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Detector Development and Performance · Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Nuclear Physics and Applications
