Searching for an eco-friendly gas mixture for the ALICE Resistive Plate Chambers
Luca Quaglia (on behalf of the ALICE, ECOgas@GIF++ collaborations),, R. Cardarelli, B. Liberti, E. Pastori, G. Proto, G. Aielli, P. Camarri, A. Di, Ciacco, L. Di Stante, R. Santonico, G. Alberghi, D. Boscherini, A. Bruni, L., Massa, A. Polini, M. Romano, L. Benussi, S. Bianco

TL;DR
This paper explores eco-friendly gas mixtures for ALICE RPCs, focusing on replacing high-GWP gases with low-GWP alternatives like tetrafluoropropene, and reports preliminary promising results from cosmic ray tests and aging studies.
Contribution
It introduces a new research effort to replace high-GWP gases in RPCs with environmentally friendly alternatives and presents initial performance and aging study plans.
Findings
Preliminary cosmic ray tests show promising detector performance with new gas mixtures.
Aging studies are underway using irradiation facilities to assess long-term stability.
Collaboration setup at CERN enables accelerated testing of eco-friendly RPC gases.
Abstract
The ALICE RPCs are operated with a mixture of 89.7% , 10% i- and 0.3% . and are fluorinated greenhouse gases with a high Global Warming Potential (GWP). New European Union regulations have imposed a progressive phase-down of the production and usage of F-gases, aiming to cut down their emission by two thirds in 2030 with respect to 2014. Even though research activities are excluded from these regulations, the phase-down will inevitably increase their price and CERN is also aiming to cut down on its emissions. For these reasons it is crucial to find a more eco-friendly gas mixture for RPCs by the time of the LHC long shutdown 3, foreseen in 2026. Since is the main contributor to the mixture GWP, an extensive R&D process has started to replace it with tetrafluoropropene (), due to its…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Detector Development and Performance · Radiation Detection and Scintillator Technologies · Superconducting Materials and Applications
