Back to Search Start Over

Fluorescence of pyrene-doped polystyrene films from room temperature down to 4 K for wavelength-shifting applications

Authors :
Benmansour, H.
Ellingwood, E.
Hars, Q.
Di Stefano, P. C. F.
Gallacher, D.
Kuźniak, M.
Pereimak, V.
Anstey, J.
Boulay, M. G.
Cai, B.
Garg, S.
Kemp, A.
Mason, J.
Skensved, P.
Strickland, V.
Stringer, M.
Source :
JINST 16, P12029 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

In liquid argon-based particle detectors, slow wavelength shifters (WLSs) could be used alongside the common, nanosecond scale, WLS tetraphenyl butadiene (TPB) for background mitigation purposes. At room temperature, pyrene has a moderate fluorescence light yield (LY) and a time constant of the order of hundreds of nanoseconds. In this work, four pyrene-doped polystyrene films with various purities and concentrations were characterized in terms of LY and decay time constants in a range of temperature between 4 K and 300 K under ultraviolet excitation. These films were found to have a LY between 35 and 50% of that of evaporated TPB. All light yields increase when cooling down, while the decays slow down. At room temperature, we observed that pyrene purity is strongly correlated with emission lifetime: highest obtainable purity samples were dominated by decays with emission time constants of $\sim$ 250-280 ns, and lower purity samples were dominated by an $\sim$ 80 ns component. One sample was investigated further to better understand the monomer and excimer emissions of pyrene. The excimer-over-monomer intensity ratio decreases when the temperature goes down, with the monomer emission dominating below $\sim$ 87 K.<br />Comment: 22 pages, 14 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
JINST 16, P12029 (2021)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2110.08103
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-0221/16/12/P12029