Proportional Light in a
Dual Phase Xenon Chamber
Elena Aprile
for the XENON Collaboration
Physics Department and Columbia Astrophysics Laboratory
Columbia University, New York
The XENON CollaborationColumbia University
Elena Aprile (PI),Karl-Ludwig Giboni ,Chuck Hailey ,Pawel Majewski, Kaixuan Ni and Masaki Yamashita Rice University
Uwe Oberlack ,Omar Vargas Yale University Daniel McKinsey
Princeton University John Kwong, Tom Hartmann, Kirk McDonald, Nathaniel Ross, Tom Shutt
Brown University Richard Gaitskell, Peter Sorensen, Luiz DeViveiros
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory William Craig, Norm Madden
University of Florida Laura Baudis
The XENON Dark Matter Experiment
• Dual Phase Liquid/Gas Xe• The XENON design is modular
Multiple 3D position sensitive LXeTPC modules, each with a 100 kg active Xe mass --> 1-tonne scale experiment.
• The 100 kg fiducial LXe volume of each module is shielded by additional 50 kg LXe. Active shield very effective for charged and neutral background rejection• Proposed Sept. 2001.• Funded Sept. 2002.• Currently - R&D towards 10 kg
prototype.• Proposal for XENON100
submitted Oct. 2003
~ 1 event/100 kg/yr
Edelweiss (June 2002)~0.25 event/kg/d
~1 event/kg/yr
http://dmtools.berkeley.edu
XENON Dark Matter Sensitivity
Liquid Xenon for Dark Matter WIMPs
High mass Xe nucleus (A ~131) good for WIMPs S.I. Int. ( s ~A2 )
Odd Isotopes with large spin-dependent enhancement factors
High atomic number (Z=54) and density 3g/cc) of liquid state good for compact and flexible detector geometry
Production and purification of Xe with << 1ppb O2 in large quantities for tonne scale experiment. “Easy” cryogenics at – 100 C.
Excellent ionizer and scintillator with distinct charge/light ratio for electron/nuclear energy deposits for background rejection
No long-lived radioactive isotopes. 85Kr reducible to ppt level
Electron vs Nuclear Recoil Discrimination in XENON
Dri
ft T
ime
E
anode
e-
grid
cathode
~1μ
s~4
0 ns
Nuclear recoil from•WIMP •NeutronElectron recoil from•gamma•Electron•Alpha
Gas
Liquid
Measure both direct scintillation(S1) and charge (proportional scintillation) (S2)
Proportional scintillation depends on type of recoil and applied electric field.
electron recoil → S2 >> S1nuclear recoil → S2 < S1 but detectable if E large
Outline
• Operation of a single phase xenon chamber with PMT in LXe– Chamber description, experiment setups– Charge collection and electron lifetime– Light and charge correlation– Light collection improvement with PTFE
• Operation of a dual phase xenon chamber– Operation technique, chamber parameters– Direct and proportional light waveforms, method of analysis– Proportional light spectrum
• Properties of electron emission and proportional scintillation– Electron emission yield with extraction field– Proportional light yield as a function of field and pressure– Ratio between direct and proportional light
Single phase LXe Detector with Charge and Light
Vg
Vc
Bi-207
PMT
LXe
AnodeGrid
CathodeE
Q
• 1cm between Grid and Cathode, 5mm between Anode and Grid.
•Gamma rays (570keV and 1064keV) and electrons (554keV and 976keV) from Bi-207 deposited on the center of Cathode.
• Direct scintillation light read out by PMT (Hamamatsu R6041) immersed in LXe.
• Ionization electrons read out by charge-sensitive pre-amplifier.
Charge collection
30
40
50
60
70
80
0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5
570 keV gamma rays
5/16/03
5/13/03
4/25/03
4/22/03
4/19/03
4/16/03
4/11/03
5/22/03
Ch
arg
e C
olle
ctio
n %
Drift Field (kV/cm)
570keV
1064keV
• Charge collection calculated assuming W- value of 15.6 eV for LXe.• With PMT and its HV divider in the LXe, a good charge collection was achieved after several cycles of purification and baking of chamber.
Electron lifetime
• Event drift time defined with respect to the scintillation light trigger.• A linear fit of the 570keV Gamma ray line shows a lifetime of about 1.5ms.• Electron drift velocity at 1kV/cm is about 2mm/μs
976keV electron
554keV electron
570keV gamma ray
1064 keV gamma ray
Light and charge correlation
• There is clear anti-correlation between ionization (charge) and scintillation (light) in liquid xenon.
• Energy resolution can be improved by combining charge and light signals.
570keV Gamma Rays
Light collection improvement with PTFE
• Adding PTFE wall and PTFE piece on the bottom improved the light collection efficiency.• The purity level of liquid xenon is not affected by PTFE.• Light spectrum of Bi-207 at zero field was obtained with the PTFE structure.
PTFE
Light Spectrum, Bi-207
570keV
1064keV
Operation of a dual phase xenon chamber
Vg
Bi-207Vc
Vg
Bi-207Vc
LXe
LXe
GXe
GXe
4kV/cm
4kV/cm
0.5kV/cm
0.5kV/cm
Vg
Bi-207Vc
LXe
GXe
4kV/cm
0.5kV/cm
• Liquid level is below the Grid• No ionization electron can escape from LXe to GXe at low extraction field (0.5kV/cm) => No proportional light is produced
Proportional light • Liquid level is above the Grid and below the Anode • Ionization electron can be extracted from LXe to GXe at high extraction field (4kV/cm) => proportional light is abundantly produced
• Liquid level is above the Anode• Ionization electrons are collected by the Anode, no GXe => no proportional light is produced
E
E
E
Method of analysis of waveforms
Bi-207 energy spectrum, readout from proportional light signals
Bi-207 energy spectrum, readout from charge signals directly.
Proportional light
Direct light
• Event waveform shows both direct and proportional light signals• The area of the proportional light pulse is proportional to the ionization electrons. Spectrum of Bi-207 from the proportional light is compared with charge spectrum in a single phase operation (right)• Lower energy threshold can be reached from proportional light
Low energy x-ray from Bi-207
Electron emission and proportional scintillation
• The negative ground state energy of quasi-free electron in liquid xenon requires an electric field to extract electron from LXe to GXe.• For a full extraction of ionization electrons to gas phase, a field of 10kV/cm in the gas xenon is needed from our data.
• The proportional light yield is related to the field in the gas, the gas gap and the gas pressure [Bolozdynya, NIM A 99]• The proportional light yield has been measured as a function of reduced field (field/pressure)
Ratio between direct and proportional light
• The ratio between proportional and direct light for Bi-207 is measured to be about 500 at 1kV/cm drift field and 4kV/cm in the gas phase. The gas pressure is around 2atm.
• With improved geometry and control of the liquid level, we will improve light collection efficiency and energy resolution, and will lower the energy threshold.
• The ratio of proportional and direct light will be measured for low energy electron recoils and nuclear recoils with improved chamber.
570keV