Observation of radon mitigation in MicroBooNE by a liquid argon filtration system
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemMateria
Counting-gas and liquid purification Gas systems and purification Noble liquid detectors (scintillation, ionization, double-phase) Time projection Chambers (TPC)
Fecha
2022-10-16Referencia bibliográfica
Published version: P. Abratenko et al. Observation of radon mitigation in MicroBooNE by a liquid argon filtration system. 2022 JINST 17 P11022 [DOI 10.1088/1748-0221/17/11/P11022]
Patrocinador
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab); U.S. Department of Energy; Office of Science; HEP User Facility; Fermi Research Alliance, LLC (FRA), acting under Contract No. DE-AC02-07CH11359; Offices of High Energy Physics and Nuclear Physics; U.S. National Science Foundation; Swiss National Science Foundation; Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC); United Kingdom Research and Innovation; Royal Society (United Kingdom); European Union’s Horizon 2020 Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions; Albert Einstein Center for Fundamental PhysicsResumen
he MicroBooNE liquid argon time projection chamber (LArTPC) maintains a high level of liquid argon purity through the use of a filtration system that removes electronegative contaminants in continuously-circulated liquid, recondensed boil off, and externally supplied argon gas. We use the MicroBooNE LArTPC to reconstruct MeV-scale radiological decays. Using this technique we measure the liquid argon filtration system's efficacy at removing radon. This is studied by placing a 500 kBq 222Rn source upstream of the filters and searching for a time-dependent increase in the number of radiological decays in the LArTPC. In the context of two models for radon mitigation via a liquid argon filtration system, a slowing mechanism and a trapping mechanism, MicroBooNE data supports a radon reduction factor of greater than 97% or 99.999%, respectively. Furthermore, a radiological survey of the filters found that the copper-based filter material was the primary medium that removed the 222Rn. This is the first observation of radon mitigation in liquid argon with a large-scale copper-based filter and could offer a radon mitigation solution for future large LArTPCs.