European Physical Journal C: Particles and Fields (Mar 2022)

$$\alpha $$ α -event characterization and rejection in point-contact HPGe detectors

  • I. J. Arnquist,
  • F. T. Avignone,
  • A. S. Barabash,
  • C. J. Barton,
  • F. E. Bertrand,
  • E. Blalock,
  • B. Bos,
  • M. Busch,
  • M. Buuck,
  • T. S. Caldwell,
  • Y.-D. Chan,
  • C. D. Christofferson,
  • P.-H. Chu,
  • M. L. Clark,
  • C. Cuesta,
  • J. A. Detwiler,
  • A. Drobizhev,
  • T. R. Edwards,
  • D. W. Edwins,
  • F. Edzards,
  • Y. Efremenko,
  • S. R. Elliott,
  • T. Gilliss,
  • G. K. Giovanetti,
  • M. P. Green,
  • J. Gruszko,
  • I. S. Guinn,
  • V. E. Guiseppe,
  • C. R. Haufe,
  • R. J. Hegedus,
  • R. Henning,
  • D. Hervas Aguilar,
  • E. W. Hoppe,
  • A. Hostiuc,
  • I. Kim,
  • R. T. Kouzes,
  • A. M. Lopez,
  • J. M. López-Castaño,
  • E. L. Martin,
  • R. D. Martin,
  • R. Massarczyk,
  • S. J. Meijer,
  • S. Mertens,
  • J. Myslik,
  • T. K. Oli,
  • G. Othman,
  • W. Pettus,
  • A. W. P. Poon,
  • D. C. Radford,
  • J. Rager,
  • A. L. Reine,
  • K. Rielage,
  • N. W. Ruof,
  • B. Saykı,
  • S. Schönert,
  • M. J. Stortini,
  • D. Tedeschi,
  • R. L. Varner,
  • S. Vasilyev,
  • J. F. Wilkerson,
  • M. Willers,
  • C. Wiseman,
  • W. Xu,
  • C.-H. Yu,
  • B. X. Zhu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1140/epjc/s10052-022-10161-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 82, no. 3
pp. 1 – 23

Abstract

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Abstract P-type point contact (PPC) HPGe detectors are a leading technology for rare event searches due to their excellent energy resolution, low thresholds, and multi-site event rejection capabilities. We have characterized a PPC detector’s response to $$\alpha $$ α particles incident on the sensitive passivated and p $$^+$$ + surfaces, a previously poorly-understood source of background. The detector studied is identical to those in the Majorana Demonstrator experiment, a search for neutrinoless double-beta decay ( $$0\nu \beta \beta $$ 0 ν β β ) in $$^{76}$$ 76 Ge. $$\alpha $$ α decays on most of the passivated surface exhibit significant energy loss due to charge trapping, with waveforms exhibiting a delayed charge recovery (DCR) signature caused by the slow collection of a fraction of the trapped charge. The DCR is found to be complementary to existing methods of $$\alpha $$ α identification, reliably identifying $$\alpha $$ α background events on the passivated surface of the detector. We demonstrate effective rejection of all surface $$\alpha $$ α events (to within statistical uncertainty) with a loss of only 0.2% of bulk events by combining the DCR discriminator with previously-used methods. The DCR discriminator has been used to reduce the background rate in the $$0\nu \beta \beta $$ 0 ν β β region of interest window by an order of magnitude in the Majorana Demonstrator and will be used in the upcoming LEGEND-200 experiment.