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Advances in High Energy Physics | 2014
J. J. Gómez Cadenas; V. Álvarez; F.I.G.M. Borges; S. Cárcel; J. Castel; S. Cebrián; A. Cervera; C.A.N. Conde; T. Dafni; T.H.V.T. Dias; J. Díaz; M Egorov; R. Esteve; P. Evtoukhovitch; L.M.P. Fernandes; P. Ferrario; A. L. Ferreira; E.D.C. Freitas; V.M. Gehman; A. Gil; A. Goldschmidt; Haley Louise Gomez; D. González-Díaz; R.M. Gutiérrez; J. M. Hauptman; J. A. Hernando Morata; D C Herrera; F. J. Iguaz; I. G. Irastorza; M A Jinete
NEXT is an experiment dedicated to neutrinoless double beta decay searches in xenon. The detector is a TPC, holding 100 kg of high-pressure xenon enriched in the 136Xe isotope. It is under construction in the Laboratorio Subterraneo de Canfranc in Spain, and it will begin operations in 2015. The NEXT detector concept provides an energy resolutionbetter than 1% FWHM and a topological signal that can be used to reduce the background. Furthermore, the NEXT technology can be extrapolated to a 1 ton-scale experiment.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2013
V. Álvarez; F.I.G.M. Borges; S. Cárcel; J. Castel; S. Cebrián; A Cervera; C.A.N. Conde; T. Dafni; T.H.V.T. Dias; J. Díaz; M Egorov; R Esteve; P Evtoukhovitch; L.M.P. Fernandes; P. Ferrario; A. L. Ferreira; E.D.C. Freitas; V.M. Gehman; A. Gil; A. Goldschmidt; Haley Louise Gomez; J.J. Gómez-Cadenas; D González-Díaz; R.M. Gutiérrez; J. M. Hauptman; J. A. Hernando Morata; D C Herrera; F. J. Iguaz; I. G. Irastorza; M A Jinete
This work was supported by the following agencies and institutions: the Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad of Spain under grants CONSOLIDER-Ingenio 2010 CSD2008-0037 (CUP) and FPA2009-13697-C04-04; the Director, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, of the US Department of Energy under contract no. DE-AC02-05CH11231; and the Portuguese FCT and FEDER through the program COMPETE, project PTDC/FIS/103860/2008. J. Renner (LBNL) acknowledges the support of a US DOE NNSA Stewardship Science Graduate Fellowship under contract no. DE-FC52-08NA28752.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2013
V. Álvarez; I. Bandac; A. Bettini; F.I.G.M. Borges; S. Cárcel; J. Castel; S. Cebrián; A Cervera; C.A.N. Conde; T. Dafni; T.H.V.T. Dias; J. Díaz; M Egorov; R Esteve; P Evtoukhovitch; L.M.P. Fernandes; P Ferrario; A. L. Ferreira; E.D.C. Freitas; V.M. Gehman; A. Gil; A. Goldschmidt; Haley Louise Gomez; J.J. Gómez-Cadenas; D González-Díaz; R.M. Gutiérrez; J. M. Hauptman; J. A. Hernando Morata; D C Herrera; F. J. Iguaz
We deeply acknowledge LSC directorate and staff for their strong support for performing the measurements at the LSC Radiopurity Service. The NEXT Collaboration acknowledges funding support from the following agencies and institutions: the Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad under grants CONSOLIDER-Ingenio 2010 CSD2008-0037 (CUP), Consolider-Ingenio 2010 CSD2007-00042 (CPAN), and under contracts ref. FPA2008-03456, FPA2009-13697-C04-04; FCT(Lisbon) and FEDER under grant PTDC/FIS/103860/2008; the European Commission under the European Research Council T-REX Starting Grant ref. ERC-2009-StG-240054 of the IDEAS program of the 7th EU Framework Program; Director, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, of the US Department of Energy under contract no. DE-AC02-05CH11231. Part of these grants are funded by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF/FEDER). J. Renner (LBNL) acknowledges the support of a US DOE NNSA Stewardship Science Graduate Fellowship under contract no. DE-FC52-08NA28752. F.I. acknowledges the support from the Eurotalents program.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2013
V. Álvarez; F.I.G.M. Borges; S. Cárcel; S. Cebrián; A Cervera; C.A.N. Conde; T. Dafni; J. Díaz; M Egorov; R Esteve; P Evtoukhovitch; L.M.P. Fernandes; P. Ferrario; A. L. Ferreira; E.D.C. Freitas; V.M. Gehman; A. Gil; A. Goldschmidt; Haley Louise Gomez; J.J. Gómez-Cadenas; D González-Díaz; R.M. Gutiérrez; J. M. Hauptman; J. A. Hernando Morata; D C Herrera; I. G. Irastorza; M A Jinete; L. Labarga; A. Laing; I. Liubarsky
High-pressure xenon gas is an attractive detection medium for a variety of applications in fundamental and applied physics. In this paper we study the ionization and scintillation detection properties of xenon gas at 10 bar pressure. For this purpose, we use a source of alpha particles in the NEXT-DEMO time projection chamber, the large scale prototype of the NEXT-100 neutrinoless double beta decay experiment, in three different drift electric field configurations. We measure the ionization electron drift velocity and longitudinal diffusion, and compare our results to expectations based on available electron scattering cross sections on pure xenon. In addition, two types of measurements addressing the connection between the ionization and scintillation yields are performed. On the one hand we observe, for the first time in xenon gas, large event-by-event correlated fluctuations between the ionization and scintillation signals, similar to that already observed in liquid xenon. On the other hand, we study the field dependence of the average scintillation and ionization yields. Both types of measurements may shed light on the mechanism of electron-ion recombination in xenon gas for highly-ionizing particles. Finally, by comparing the response of alpha particles and electrons in NEXT-DEMO, we find no evidence for quenching of the primary scintillation light produced by alpha particles in the xenon gas.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2014
V. Álvarez; F.I.G.M. Borges; S. Cárcel; J. Castel; S. Cebrián; A Cervera; C.A.N. Conde; T. Dafni; T.H.V.T. Dias; J. Díaz; M Egorov; R Esteve; P Evtoukhovitch; L.M.P. Fernandes; P. Ferrario; A. L. Ferreira; E.D.C. Freitas; V.M. Gehman; A. Gil; A. Goldschmidt; Haley Louise Gomez; J.J. Gómez-Cadenas; D González-Díaz; R.M. Gutiérrez; J. M. Hauptman; J. A. Hernando Morata; D C Herrera; F. J. Iguaz; I.G. Irastorza; M A Jinete
NEXT-MM is a general-purpose high pressure (10 bar, ~ 25 l active volume) Xenon-based TPC, read out in charge mode with an 0.8 cm × 0.8 cm-segmented 700 cm2 plane (1152 ch) of the latest microbulk-Micromegas technology. It has been recently commissioned at University of Zaragoza as part of the R&D of the NEXT 0νββ experiment, although the experiments first stage is currently being built based on a SiPM/PMT-readout concept relying on electroluminescence. Around 2 million events were collected during the last months, stemming from the low energy γ-rays emitted by a 241Am source when interacting with the Xenon gas (Eγ = 26, 30, 59.5 keV). The localized nature of such events around atmospheric pressure, the long drift times, as well as the possibility to determine their production time from the associated α particle in coincidence, allow the extraction of primordial properties of the TPC filling gas, namely the drift velocity, diffusion and attachment coefficients. In this work we focus on the little explored combination of Xe and trimethylamine (TMA) for which, in particular, such properties are largely unknown. This gas mixture offers potential advantages over pure Xenon when aimed at Rare Event Searches, mainly due to its Penning characteristics, wave-length shifting properties and reduced diffusion, and it is being actively investigated by our collaboration. The chamber is currently operated at 2.7 bar, as an intermediate step towards the envisaged 10 bar. We report here its performance as well as a first implementation of the calibration procedures that have allowed the extension of the previously reported energy resolution to the whole readout plane (10.6% FWHM@30 keV).
Journal of Instrumentation | 2012
V. Álvarez; J. Agramunt; M Ball; M. Batalle; J. Bayarri; F.I.G.M. Borges; Henk J. Bolink; Hicham Brine; S. Cárcel; J. M. Carmona; J. Castel; J M Catalá; S. Cebrián; A Cervera; D Chan; C.A.N. Conde; T. Dafni; T.H.V.T. Dias; J. Díaz; R Esteve; P Evtoukhovitch; J Ferrando; L.M.P. Fernandes; P Ferrario; A. L. Ferreira; E. Ferrer-Ribas; E.D.C. Freitas; S A García; A. Gil; I. Giomataris
Silicon photomultipliers (SiPM) are the photon detectors chosen for the tracking readout in NEXT, a neutrinoless \bb decay experiment which uses a high pressure gaseous xenon time projection chamber (TPC). The reconstruction of event track and topology in this gaseous detector is a key handle for background rejection. Among the commercially available sensors that can be used for tracking, SiPMs offer important advantages, mainly high gain, ruggedness, cost-effectiveness and radio-purity. Their main drawback, however, is their non sensitivity in the emission spectrum of the xenon scintillation (peak at 175 nm). This is overcome by coating these sensors with the organic wavelength shifter tetraphenyl butadiene (TPB). In this paper we describe the protocol developed for coating the SiPMs with TPB and the measurements performed for characterizing the coatings as well as the performance of the coated sensors in the UV-VUV range.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2014
V. Álvarez; F Aznar; F.I.G.M. Borges; D Calvet; S. Cárcel; J. Castel; S. Cebrián; A Cervera; C.A.N. Conde; T. Dafni; T.H.V.T. Dias; J. Díaz; F. Druillole; M Egorov; R Esteve; P Evtoukhovitch; L.M.P. Fernandes; P. Ferrario; A. L. Ferreira; E. Ferrer-Ribas; E.D.C. Freitas; V.M. Gehman; A. Gil; I. Giomataris; A. Goldschmidt; Haley Louise Gomez; J.J. Gómez-Cadenas; D González-Díaz; R.M. Gutiérrez; J. M. Hauptman
A technical description of NEXT-MM and its commissioning and first performance is reported. Having an active volume of ~ 35 cm drift ? 28 cm diameter, it constitutes the largest Micromegas-read TPC operated in Xenon ever constructed, made by a sectorial arrangement of the 4 largest single wafers manufactured with the Microbulk technique to date. It is equipped with a suitably pixelized readout and with a sufficiently large sensitive volume ( ~ 23 l) so as to contain long ( ~ 20 cm) electron tracks. First results obtained at 1 bar for Xenon and Trymethylamine (Xe-(2%)TMA) mixture are presented. The TPC can accurately reconstruct extended background tracks. An encouraging full-width half-maximum of 11.6 % was obtained for ~ 29 keV gammas without resorting to any data post-processing.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2012
V. Álvarez; F.I.G.M. Borges; S. Cárcel; J. M. Carmona; J. Castel; J M Catalá; S. Cebrián; A Cervera; D Chan; C.A.N. Conde; T. Dafni; T.H.V.T. Dias; J. Díaz; M Egorov; R Esteve; P Evtoukhovitch; L.M.P. Fernandes; P Ferrario; A. L. Ferreira; E. Ferrer-Ribas; E.D.C. Freitas; V.M. Gehman; A. Gil; I. Giomataris; A. Goldschmidt; Haley Louise Gomez; J.J. Gómez-Cadenas; K González; D González-Díaz; R.M. Gutiérrez
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2013
V. Álvarez; F.I.G.M. Borges; S. Cárcel; J. Castel; S. Cebrián; A Cervera; C.A.N. Conde; T. Dafni; T.H.V.T. Dias; J. Díaz; M Egorov; R. Esteve; P. Evtoukhovitch; L.M.P. Fernandes; P. Ferrario; A. L. Ferreira; E.D.C. Freitas; V.M. Gehman; A. Gil; A. Goldschmidt; Haley Louise Gomez; J.J. Gómez-Cadenas; D González-Díaz; R.M. Gutiérrez; J. M. Hauptman; J. A. Hernando Morata; D C Herrera; F. J. Iguaz; I.G. Irastorza; M A Jinete
arXiv: Instrumentation and Detectors | 2011
V. Álvarez; D. Lorca; M Ball; J.F. Toledo; Z. Tsamalaidze; J.L. Perez-Aparicio; R. Esteve; J. Bayarri; J.P. Mols; E. Gomez; Haley Louise Gomez; E.D.C. Freitas; C.A.N. Conde; J.A. Villar; J. A. M. Lopes; D C Herrera; D Chan; J.F.C.A. Veloso; M. Sorel; A. L. Ferreira; F.J. Mora; F. Monrabal; K González; A. Goldschmidt; T. Dafni; A. Rodríguez; J. Martín-Albo; I.G. Irastorza; D Vázquez; P. Ferrario