Development of low-background photomultiplier tubes for liquid xenon detectors
XMASS Collaboration, K. Abe, Y. Chen, K. Hiraide, K. Ichimura, S., Imaizumi, N. Kato, Y. Kishimoto, K. Kobayashi, M. Kobayashi, S. Moriyama, M., Nakahata, K. Sato, H. Sekiya, T. Suzuki, A. Takeda, S. Tasaka, M. Yamashita,, B. S. Yang, N. Y. Kim, Y. D. Kim, Y. H. Kim, R. Ishii

TL;DR
This paper reports the development of a low-background, high-performance photomultiplier tube with ultra-low radioactivity, optimized for rare event detection in liquid xenon detectors.
Contribution
A novel 3-inch convex PMT with significantly reduced radioactivity and improved performance features for use in rare event physics experiments.
Findings
Achieved ultra-low radioactivity levels in PMTs
Demonstrated good timing resolution and large photon acceptance
Resolved Xe gas leakage issues in previous models
Abstract
We successfully developed a new photomultiplier tube (PMT) with a three-inch diameter, convex-shaped photocathode, R13111. Its prominent features include good performance and ultra-low radioactivity. The convex-shaped photocathode realized a large photon acceptance and good timing resolution. Low radioactivity was achieved by three factors: (1) the glass material was synthesized using low-radioactive-contamination material; (2) the photocathode was produced with K-enriched potassium; and (3) the purest grade of aluminum material was used for the vacuum seal. As a result each R13111 PMT contains only about 0.4 mBq of Ra, less than 2 mBq of U, 0.3 mBq of Ra, 2 mBq of K and 0.2 mBq of Co. We also examined and resolved the intrinsic leakage of Xe gas into PMTs that was observed in several older models. We thus succeeded in developing a PMT that…
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