Modeling impurity concentrations in liquid argon detectors
Abstract
Impurities in noble liquid detectors used for neutrino and dark matter experiments can significantly impact the quality of data. We present an experimentally verified model for describing the dynamics of impurity distributions in liquid argon (LAr) detectors. The model considers sources, sinks, and transport of impurities within and between the gas and liquid argon phases. Measurements of oxygen concentrations in a 20-L LAr multi-purpose test stand are compared to calculations made with this model to show that an accurate description of the concentrations under various operational conditions can be obtained. A result of this analysis is a determination of Henry's coefficient for oxygen in LAr. These calculations also show that some processes have small effects on the impurity dynamics and excluding them yields a solution as a sum of two exponential terms. This solution provides a simple way to extract Henry's coefficient with negligible approximation error. It is applied to the data and the Henry's coefficient for oxygen in LAr is obtained as 0.84, consistent with literature results. Based on the analysis of the data with the model, we further suggest that, for a large liquid argon detector, barriers to flow ("baffles") installed in the gas phase to restrict flow can help reduce the ultimate impurity concentration in the LAr.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.2009.10906,
title = {Modeling impurity concentrations in liquid argon detectors},
author = {Aiwu Zhang and Yichen Li and Craig Thorn and Carl Bromberg and Milind V. Diwan and Steve Kettell and Vittorio Paolone and Xin Qian and James Stewart and Wei Tang and Chao Zhang},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2009.10906},
year = {2021}
}
Comments
63 pages, 14 figures, in preparation for submission to NIM A