Measurement of the bulk radioactive contamination of detector-grade silicon with DAMIC at SNOLAB
physics.ins-det
/ Authors
A. Aguilar-Arevalo, D. Amidei, D. Baxter, G. Cancelo, B. A. Cervantes Vergara, A. E. Chavarria, E. Darragh-Ford, J. C. D'Olivo, J. Estrada, F. Favela-Perez
and 21 more authors
R. Gaïor, Y. Guardincerri, T. W. Hossbach, B. Kilminster, I. Lawson, S. J. Lee, A. Letessier-Selvon, A. Matalon, P. Mitra, A. Piers, P. Privitera, K. Ramanathan, J. Da Rocha, Y. Sarkis, M. Settimo, R. Smida, R. Thomas, J. Tiffenberg, M. Traina, R. Vilar, A. L. Virto
/ Abstract
We present measurements of bulk radiocontaminants in the high-resistivity silicon CCDs from the DAMIC at SNOLAB experiment. We utilize the exquisite spatial resolution of CCDs to discriminate between $α$ and $β$ decays, and to search with high efficiency for the spatially-correlated decays of various radioisotope sequences. Using spatially-correlated $β$ decays, we measure a bulk radioactive contamination of $^{32}$Si in the CCDs of $140 \pm 30$ $μ$Bq/kg, and place an upper limit on bulk $^{210}$Pb of $< 160~μ$Bq/kg. Using similar analyses of spatially-correlated bulk $α$ decays, we set limits of $< 11$ $μ$Bq/kg (0.9 ppt) on $^{238}$U and of $< 7.3$ $μ$Bq/kg (1.8 ppt) on $^{232}$Th. The ability of DAMIC CCDs to identify and reject spatially-coincident backgrounds, particularly from $^{32}$Si, has significant implications for the next generation of silicon-based dark matter experiments, where $β$'s from $^{32}$Si decay will likely be a dominant background. This capability demonstrates the readiness of the CCD technology to achieve kg-scale dark matter sensitivity.