Radiopure Scintillating Plastics for Rare-Event Physics Experiments
ORAL
Abstract
Rare-event physics experiments, such as searches for neutrinoless double-beta decay, dark matter interactions, and other beyond-Standard-Model processes, require ultra-low background environments to achieve their sensitivity goals. Radiopure materials with multiple functions, such as providing mechanical strength while enabling active background rejection, are increasingly important as they ensure that any added mass in a low background detector also contributes to suppressing backgrounds. Poly(ethylene-2,6-naphthalate) (PEN) has emerged as a promising candidate due to its intrinsic scintillation properties, chemical stability, and compatibility with cryogenic environments. Recent implementations of PEN in experiments such as LEGEND-200 have demonstrated its dual role as a structural material and as an active component for background identification. These results underscore the broader potential for PEN and similar plastics in future rare-event physics experiments. Ongoing research includes the development of modified PEN material and the application of additive manufacturing to produce complex, radiopure scintillating geometries tailored to experiment-specific needs. This presentation will review recent progress in the synthesis, radiopurity, and scintillation performance of these improved materials, highlight lessons learned from current experimental deployments, and explore applicability across a wide range of next-generation rare-event physics experiments .
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Presenters
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Brennan T Hackett
University of Tennessee, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Authors
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Brennan T Hackett
University of Tennessee, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
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Andreas Leonhardt
Technical University of Munich
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Cabot-Ann Christofferson
South Dakota Mines
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Peter Bauer
Thuringia Institute for Textile and Polymer Research
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Ines Kuhnert
Leibniz Institute for Polymer Research
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Bela Majorovits
Max Planck Institute for Physics
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Thomas Ruland
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
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Michael T Febbraro
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
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Toby T King
Oak Ridge National Laboratory