We briefly review the concept and properties of the Thick GEM (THGEM); it is a robust, high-gain gaseous electron multiplier, manufactured economically by standard printed-circuit drilling and etching technology. Its operation and structure resemble that of GEMs but with 5 to 20-fold expanded dimensions. The millimeter-scale hole-size results in good electron transport and in large avalanche-multiplication factors, e.g. reaching 10^7 in double-THGEM cascaded single-photoelectron detectors. The multiplier's material, parameters and shape can be application-tailored; it can operate practically in any counting gas, including noble gases, over a pressure range spanning from 1 mbar to several bars; its operation at cryogenic (LAr) conditions was recently demonstrated. The high gain, sub-millimeter spatial resolution, high counting-rate capability, good timing properties and the possibility of industrial production capability of large-area robust detectors, pave ways towards a broad spectrum of potential applications; some are discussed here in brief.
@article{arxiv.0807.2026,
title = {A concise review on THGEM detectors},
author = {A. Breskin and R. Alon and M. Cortesi and R. Chechik and J. Miyamoto and V. Dangendorf and J. Maia and J. M. F. Dos Santos},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0807.2026},
year = {2008}
}
Comments
8 pages, 11 figures; Invited Review at INSTR08, Novosibirsk, Feb 28-March 5 2008