Mass spectrometric investigations into 3D printed parts to assess radiopurity as ultralow background materials for rare event physics detectors
Amanda D. French, Sonia Alcantar Anguiano, Mary Bliss, Josef Christ,, Maria Laura di Vacri, Rebecca Erikson, Khadouja Harouaka, Eric W. Hoppe, Jay, W. Grate, Isaac J. Arnquist

TL;DR
This study uses mass spectrometry to measure radiopurity in 3D printed polymer parts, identifying materials with ultra-low background radiation suitable for rare event physics detectors.
Contribution
It introduces a novel dry ashing method combined with ICP-MS to accurately assess radiocontamination in 3D printed materials for low-background applications.
Findings
ULTEM 1010 and 9085 show very low radiocontamination levels.
PPS filament has high Th-232 and U-238 contamination, unsuitable for low-background use.
Printing process contributes negligible contamination, but pre- and post-cleaning are recommended.
Abstract
New data are reported for polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF), polyphenylene sulfide (PPS), and two forms of polyetherimide (PEI, branded ULTEM 1010 and 9085). Data for starting filaments and both simple and complex printed parts are reported. PVDF filaments and simple printed beads, were found to have values of approximately 30 and 50 ppt for Th-232 and U-238, respectively, while a more complex spring clip part had slightly elevated Th-232 levels of 65 ppt, with U-238 remaining at 50 ppt. PPS filament was found to have concentrations of 270 and 710 ppt for Th-232 and U-238, respectively, and were not chosen to be printed as those levels were already higher than other material options. ULTEM 1010 filaments and printed complex spring clip parts were found to have concentrations of around 5 and 7 ppt for Th-232 and U-238, respectively, illustrating no significant contamination from the…
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