Electroluminescence TPCs at the thermal diffusion limit
Abstract
The NEXT experiment aims at searching for the hypothetical neutrinoless double-beta decay from the Xe isotope using a high-purity xenon TPC. Efficient discrimination of the events through pattern recognition of the topology of primary ionisation tracks is a major requirement for the experiment. However, it is limited by the diffusion of electrons. It is known that the addition of a small fraction of a molecular gas to xenon reduces electron diffusion. On the other hand, the electroluminescence (EL) yield drops and the achievable energy resolution may be compromised. We have studied the effect of adding several molecular gases to xenon (CO, CH and CF) on the EL yield and energy resolution obtained in a small prototype of driftless gas proportional scintillation counter. We have compared our results on the scintillation characteristics (EL yield and energy resolution) with a microscopic simulation, obtaining the diffusion coefficients in those conditions as well. Accordingly, electron diffusion may be reduced from about 10 mm/ for pure xenon down to 2.5 mm/ using additive concentrations of about 0.05%, 0.2% and 0.02% for CO, CH and CF, respectively. Our results show that CF admixtures present the highest EL yield in those conditions, but very poor energy resolution as a result of huge fluctuations observed in the EL formation. CH presents the best energy resolution despite the EL yield being the lowest. The results obtained with xenon admixtures are extrapolated to the operational conditions of the NEXT-100 TPC. CO and CH show potential as molecular additives in a large xenon TPC, CH showing the best performance and stability to be used in the NEXT-100 TPC, with an extrapolated energy resolution of 0.4% at 2.45 MeV for concentrations below 0.4%.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1806.05891,
title = {Electroluminescence TPCs at the thermal diffusion limit},
author = {C. A. O. Henriques and C. M. B. Monteiro and D. González-Díaz and C. D. R Azevedo and E. D. C. Freitas and R. D. P. Mano and M. R. Jorge and A. F. M. Fernandes and J. J. Gómez-Cadenas and L. M. P. Fernandes and C. Adams and V. Álvarez and L. Arazi and K. Bailey and F. Ballester and J. M. Benlloch-Rodríguez and F. I. G. M. Borges and A. Botas and S. Cárcel and J. V. Carrión and S. Cebrián and C. A. N. Conde and J. Díaz and M. Diesburg and J. Escada and R. Esteve and R. Felkai and P. Ferrario and A. L. Ferreira and J. Generowicz and A. Goldschmidt and R. Guenette and R. M. Gutiérrez and K. Hafidi and J. Hauptman and A. I. Hernandez and J. A. Hernando Morata and V. Herrero and S. Johnston and B. J. P. Jones and M. Kekic and L. Labarga and A. Laing and P. Lebrun and N. López-March and M. Losada and J. Martín-Albo and A. Martínez and G. Martínez-Lema and A. McDonald and F. Monrabal and F. J. Mora and J. Muñoz Vidal and M. Musti and M. Nebot-Guinot and P. Novella and D. R. Nygren and B. Palmeiro and A. Para and J. Pérez and F. Psihas and M. Querol and J. Renner and J. Repond and S. Riordan and L. Ripoll and J. Rodríguez and L. Rogers and C. Romo-Luque and F. P. Santos and J. M. F. dos Santos and A. Simón and C. Sofka and M. Sorel and T. Stiegler and J. F. Toledo and J. Torrent and J. F. C. A. Veloso and R. Webb and J. T. White and N. Yahlali},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1806.05891},
year = {2019}
}
Comments
22 pages, 8 figures