ZnO-based scintillating bolometers: New prospects to study double beta decay of 64Zn

Abstract

The first detailed study on the performance of a ZnO-based cryogenic scintillating bolometer as a detector to search for rare processes in zinc isotopes was performed. A 7.2 g ZnO low-temperature detector, containing more than 80\% of zinc in its mass, exhibits good energy resolution of baseline noise 1.0--2.7 keV FWHM at various working temperatures resulting in a low-energy threshold for the experiment, 2.0--6.0 keV. The light yield for β/γ events was measured as 1.5(3) keV/MeV, while it varies for α particles in the range of 0.2--3.0 keV/MeV. The detector demonstrate an effective identification of the β/γ events from α events using time-properties of only heat signals. %(namely, Rise time parameter). The radiopurity of the ZnO crystal was evaluated using the Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry, an ultra-low-background High Purity Ge γ-spectrometer, and bolometric measurements. Only limits were set at the level of O(1--100) mBq/kg on activities of K40, Cs137 and daughter nuclides from the U/Th natural decay chains. The total internal α-activity was calculated to be 22(2) mBq/kg, with a major contribution caused by 6(1) mBq/kg of Th232 and 12(2) mBq/kg of U234. Limits on double beta decay (DBD) processes in Zn64 and Zn70 isotopes were set on the level of O(1017--1018) yr for various decay modes profiting from 271 h of acquired background data in the above-ground lab. This study shows a good potential for ZnO-based scintillating bolometers to search for DBD processes of Zn isotopes, especially in Zn64, with the most prominent spectral features at 10--20 keV, like the two neutrino double electron capture. A 10 kg-scale experiment can reach the experimental sensitivity at the level of O(1024) yr.

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