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HEIMDAL is a thermal powder diffractometer designed to operate at the European Spallation Source, worlds most intense neutron source. The detailed design of the instrument, which is expected to enter user operation in 2024/2025, assumes that the neutrons scattered by the powder under investigation will be collected with hundreds of large-area Multi-Wire Proportional Counters employing a $^{10}$B$_4$C-solid converter. The gas counters will consists of large active volumes and tapered trapezoidal shapes that allow for close packing into a cylindrical shell with high solid angle coverage. The whole detector will operate in an air environment within the shielding cave and provide signals with sensitivity for locating detection in three dimensions. This paper presents the results of a GEANT4 study of the baseline design for the HEIMDAL powder diffraction detector. The detector model was used to study key performance parameters such as detection efficiency and spatial resolution. The contribution of the detector to the resolving power of the instrument, one of the key figures-of-merit for powder diffractometers, was also investigated. Most of the simulation results reported in this work cannot be validated against a sufficiently similar physical reference until the first segment or module are constructed and tested with neutron beam. However, these results can help identify possible ways of optimising the detector design and provide the first glimpse into the expected performance of this technological approach.
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The European Spallation Source (ESS) is the worlds next generation spallation-based neutron source. The research conducted at ESS will yield in the discovery and development of new materials including the fields of manufacturing, pharmaceuticals, aer