Characterization of an Ionization Readout Tile for nEXO
nEXO Collaboration: M. Jewell, A. Schubert, W.R. Cen, J. Dalmasson, R., DeVoe, L. Fabris, G. Gratta, A. Jamil, G. Li, A. Odian, M. Patel, A. Pocar,, D. Qiu, Q. Wang, L.J. Wen, J.B. Albert, G. Anton, I.J. Arnquist, I. Badhrees,, P. Barbeau, D. Beck, V. Belov, F. Bourque

TL;DR
This paper introduces a modular, grid-less ionization readout tile for liquid xenon detectors, demonstrating its effective performance and potential advantages for large-scale experiments like nEXO.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel segmented, grid-less anode tile design for liquid xenon TPCs, reducing backgrounds and improving signal reconstruction in large detectors.
Findings
Achieved 5.5% energy resolution at 570 keV
Good agreement between measurements and simulations
Demonstrated effective operation in liquid xenon environment
Abstract
A new design for the anode of a time projection chamber, consisting of a charge-detecting "tile", is investigated for use in large scale liquid xenon detectors. The tile is produced by depositing 60 orthogonal metal charge-collecting strips, 3~mm wide, on a 10~\si{\cm} 10~\si{\cm} fused-silica wafer. These charge tiles may be employed by large detectors, such as the proposed tonne-scale nEXO experiment to search for neutrinoless double-beta decay. Modular by design, an array of tiles can cover a sizable area. The width of each strip is small compared to the size of the tile, so a Frisch grid is not required. A grid-less, tiled anode design is beneficial for an experiment such as nEXO, where a wire tensioning support structure and Frisch grid might contribute radioactive backgrounds and would have to be designed to accommodate cycling to cryogenic temperatures. The segmented…
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