Toward a Quasi-Background-Free Measurement in LEGEND-1000 with Custom Synthesized PEN

ORAL

Abstract

Identification and mitigation of background radiation is of utmost importance for enabling discovery potential for rare event experiments. The neutrinoless double beta decay experiment LEGEND, utilizes background suppression to reach discovery of T1/2>1028yrs with the isotope 76Ge. Poly(ethylene-2,6-naphthalate) (PEN) has emerged as a highly promising material for LEGEND due to its intrinsic scintillating properties and its structural behavior at both room and cryogenic temperatures. PEN has been successfully implemented in the LEGEND-200 experiment as both an active material and a structural component within the detector assembly. Looking towards the next-generation experiment, LEGEND-1000 will further reduce background radiation to <10-5 cts/(keV kg yr). To achieve this goal, we are looking to produce custom PEN-G and expand applications to further improve background radiation identification. We will present the radiopurity and scintillator properties of custom synthesized PEN and current applications in LEGEND-200 and future applications in LEGEND-1000.

*This work is supported by the U.S. DOE and the NSF, the LANL, ORNL and LBNL LDRD programs; the European ERC and Horizon programs; the German DFG, BMBF, and MPG; the Italian INFN; the Polish NCN and MNiSW; the Czech MEYS; the Slovak SRDA; the Swiss SNF; the UK STFC; the Canadian NSERC and CFI; the LNGS, SNOLAB, and SURF facilities.

Presenters

  • Brennan T Hackett

    • Max Planck Institute for Physics

Authors

  • Brennan T Hackett

    • Max Planck Institute for Physics
  • Peter Bauer

    • Thuringian Institute for Textile and Plastics Research
  • Tommaso Comellato

    • Technical University of Munich
  • Michael T Febbraro

    • Oak Ridge National Laboratory
  • Hershini Gadaria

    • Technical University of Munich
  • Maximilian Goldbrunner

    • Technical University of Munich
  • Konstantin Gusev

    • Technical University of Munich
  • Florian Henkes

    • Technical University of Munich
  • Patrick Krause

    • Technical University of Munich
  • Ines Kühnert

    • Leibniz Institute of Polymer Research
  • Niko Lay

    • Technical University of Munich
  • Andreas Leonhardt

    • Technical University of Munich
  • Andreas Leuteritz

    • Leibniz Institute of Polymer Research Dresden
  • Bela Majorovits

    • Max Planck Institute for Physics
  • Susanne Mertens

    • Technical University of Munich
  • Moritz Neuberger

    • Technical University of Munich
  • Florian Puch

    • Thuringian Institute for Textile and Plastics Research
  • Nadezda Rumyantseva

    • Technical University of Munich
  • Mario Schwarz

    • Technical University of Munich
  • Stefan Schönert

    • Technical University of Munich
  • Hans Steiger

    • Technical University of Munich
  • Markus Stommel

    • Leibniz Institute for Polymer Research
  • Christoph Vogl

    • Technical University of Munich
  • Michael Willers

    • Technical University of Munich