An online radon monitor for low-background detector assembly facilities

Abstract Backgrounds from long-lived radon decay products are often problematic for low-energy neutrino and rare-event experiments. These isotopes, specifically $${}^{210}\hbox {Pb}$$ 210 Pb , $${}^{210}\hbox {Bi}$$ 210 Bi , and $${}^{210}\hbox {Po}$$ 210 Po , easily plate out onto surfaces exposed...

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Main Authors: K. Pelczar, G. Zuzel, M. Wójcik, A. Pocar, An. Ianni
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2021-01-01
Series:European Physical Journal C: Particles and Fields
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1140/epjc/s10052-020-08793-z
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spelling doaj-5bedff971d4b417ca8b712ff71db53f32021-01-31T16:34:16ZengSpringerOpenEuropean Physical Journal C: Particles and Fields1434-60441434-60522021-01-0181111210.1140/epjc/s10052-020-08793-zAn online radon monitor for low-background detector assembly facilitiesK. Pelczar0G. Zuzel1M. Wójcik2A. Pocar3An. Ianni4M. Smoluchowski Institute of Physics, Jagiellonian UniversityM. Smoluchowski Institute of Physics, Jagiellonian UniversityM. Smoluchowski Institute of Physics, Jagiellonian UniversityAmherst Center for Fundamental Interactions and Physics Department, University of MassachusettsPhysics Department, Princeton UniversityAbstract Backgrounds from long-lived radon decay products are often problematic for low-energy neutrino and rare-event experiments. These isotopes, specifically $${}^{210}\hbox {Pb}$$ 210 Pb , $${}^{210}\hbox {Bi}$$ 210 Bi , and $${}^{210}\hbox {Po}$$ 210 Po , easily plate out onto surfaces exposed to radon-loaded air. The alpha emitter $${}^{210}\hbox {Po}$$ 210 Po is particularly dangerous for detectors searching for weakly-interacting dark matter particles. Neutrons produced via ( $$\upalpha $$ α , n) reactions in detector materials are, in some cases, a residual background that can limit the sensitivity of the experiment. An effective solution is to reduce the $${}^{222}\hbox {Rn}$$ 222 Rn activity in the air in contact with detector components during fabrication, assembly, commissioning, and operation. We present the design, construction, calibration procedures and performance of an electrostatic radon detector made to monitor two radon-suppressed clean rooms built for the DARKSIDE-50 experiment. A dedicated data acquisition system immune to harsh operating conditions of the radon monitor is also described. A record detection limit for $${}^{222}\hbox {Rn}$$ 222 Rn specific activity in air achieved by the device is $$0.05\,\hbox {mBqm}^{-3}$$ 0.05 mBqm - 3 (STP). The radon concentration of different air samples collected from the two DARKSIDE-50 clean rooms measured with the electrostatic detector is presented.https://doi.org/10.1140/epjc/s10052-020-08793-z
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author K. Pelczar
G. Zuzel
M. Wójcik
A. Pocar
An. Ianni
spellingShingle K. Pelczar
G. Zuzel
M. Wójcik
A. Pocar
An. Ianni
An online radon monitor for low-background detector assembly facilities
European Physical Journal C: Particles and Fields
author_facet K. Pelczar
G. Zuzel
M. Wójcik
A. Pocar
An. Ianni
author_sort K. Pelczar
title An online radon monitor for low-background detector assembly facilities
title_short An online radon monitor for low-background detector assembly facilities
title_full An online radon monitor for low-background detector assembly facilities
title_fullStr An online radon monitor for low-background detector assembly facilities
title_full_unstemmed An online radon monitor for low-background detector assembly facilities
title_sort online radon monitor for low-background detector assembly facilities
publisher SpringerOpen
series European Physical Journal C: Particles and Fields
issn 1434-6044
1434-6052
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Abstract Backgrounds from long-lived radon decay products are often problematic for low-energy neutrino and rare-event experiments. These isotopes, specifically $${}^{210}\hbox {Pb}$$ 210 Pb , $${}^{210}\hbox {Bi}$$ 210 Bi , and $${}^{210}\hbox {Po}$$ 210 Po , easily plate out onto surfaces exposed to radon-loaded air. The alpha emitter $${}^{210}\hbox {Po}$$ 210 Po is particularly dangerous for detectors searching for weakly-interacting dark matter particles. Neutrons produced via ( $$\upalpha $$ α , n) reactions in detector materials are, in some cases, a residual background that can limit the sensitivity of the experiment. An effective solution is to reduce the $${}^{222}\hbox {Rn}$$ 222 Rn activity in the air in contact with detector components during fabrication, assembly, commissioning, and operation. We present the design, construction, calibration procedures and performance of an electrostatic radon detector made to monitor two radon-suppressed clean rooms built for the DARKSIDE-50 experiment. A dedicated data acquisition system immune to harsh operating conditions of the radon monitor is also described. A record detection limit for $${}^{222}\hbox {Rn}$$ 222 Rn specific activity in air achieved by the device is $$0.05\,\hbox {mBqm}^{-3}$$ 0.05 mBqm - 3 (STP). The radon concentration of different air samples collected from the two DARKSIDE-50 clean rooms measured with the electrostatic detector is presented.
url https://doi.org/10.1140/epjc/s10052-020-08793-z
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