March 13, 2026
Journal Article

Ultra-sensitive radon assay using an electrostatic chamber in a recirculating system

Abstract

Rare event searches such as neutrinoless double beta decay and Weakly Interacting Massive Particle detection require ultra-low background detectors. Radon contamination is a significant challenge for these experiments, which employ highly sensitive radon assay techniques to identify and select low-emission materials. This work presents the development of ultra-sensitive electrostatic chamber (ESC) instruments designed to measure radon emanation in a recirculating gas loop, for future lower background experiments. Unlike traditional methods that separate emanation and detection steps, this system allows continuous radon transport and detection. This is made possible with a custom-built recirculation pump. A Python-based analysis framework, PyDAn, was developed to process and fit time-dependent radon decay data. Radon emanation rates are given for various materials measured with this instrument. A radon source of known activity provides an absolute calibration, enabling statistically-limited minimal detectable activities of 20 µBq. These devices are powerful tools for screening materials in the development of low-background particle physics experiments.

Published: March 13, 2026

Citation

Anker A., P. Breur, B. Mong, P. Acharya, A. Amy, E. Angelico, and I.J. Arnquist, et al. 2025. Ultra-sensitive radon assay using an electrostatic chamber in a recirculating system. Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research. Section A: Accelerators, Spectrometers, Detectors and Associated Equipment 1081:Art No. 170876. PNNL-SA-216535. doi:10.1016/j.nima.2025.170876

Research topics