In-situ high voltage generation with Cockcroft-Walton multiplier for xenon gas time projection chamber
Pith reviewed 2026-05-23 05:41 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
A Cockcroft-Walton multiplier placed inside a xenon gas TPC generates the high voltage needed for electron drift from a low external AC input.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The central discovery is that integrating a Cockcroft-Walton multiplier inside the pressure vessel of the AXEL xenon TPC allows in-situ generation of the high voltage for the drift field. A low AC voltage is supplied from outside and converted to the necessary DC high voltage inside, enabling continuous operation for 40 days at 6.8 bar while achieving an energy resolution of (0.67 ± 0.08)% FWHM at 2615 keV using SiPM-based electroluminescence readout.
What carries the argument
The Cockcroft-Walton multiplier, which steps up a low AC input voltage to a high DC output voltage inside the sealed pressure vessel to create the uniform electric field for drifting ionization electrons.
If this is right
- The design eliminates the requirement for a high-voltage feedthrough penetrating the pressure vessel.
- The TPC can be operated stably for extended periods without performance degradation from the internal voltage generator.
- High energy resolution is maintained, supporting sensitive searches for rare events such as neutrinoless double beta decay.
- The method is compatible with SiPM readout systems that are resistant to electronic noise.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- This in-situ generation technique might simplify scaling up larger xenon TPCs by reducing external connections.
- It could be adapted to other gas detectors where high voltages are needed but feedthroughs pose challenges.
- Further tests could explore higher pressures or different gas mixtures to broaden applicability.
Load-bearing premise
The internal placement of the Cockcroft-Walton multiplier does not introduce electronic noise or interference that would degrade the silicon photomultiplier electroluminescence signals.
What would settle it
Measurement showing that the energy resolution worsens when the multiplier is active compared to when high voltage is supplied externally.
Figures
read the original abstract
We have newly developed a Cockcroft-Walton (CW) multiplier that can be used in a gas time projection chamber (TPC). A TPC requires a high voltage to form an electric field that drifts ionization electrons. Supplying the high voltage from outside the pressure vessel requires a dedicated high-voltage feedthrough. An alternative approach is to generate the high voltage inside the pressure vessel with a relatively low voltage introduced from outside. A CW multiplier can convert a low AC voltage input to a high DC voltage output, making it suitable for this purpose. We have integrated a CW multiplier into the AXEL (A Xenon ElectroLuminescence detector), a high pressure xenon gas TPC to search for neutrinoless double beta decay of $^{136}$Xe. It uses silicon photomultipliers to detect the ionization electrons through elecrtoluminescence, making it strong against electronic noise. Operation of the CW multiplier was successfully demonstrated; the TPC was operated for 40 days at 6.8 bar, and an energy resolution as high as (0.67 $\pm$ 0.08) % (FWHM) at 2615 keV was obtained.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript describes the development and integration of a Cockcroft-Walton (CW) multiplier inside the pressure vessel of the AXEL high-pressure xenon gas TPC to generate the drift field from a low external AC voltage, avoiding a dedicated HV feedthrough. The authors report successful demonstration of CW operation, stable TPC running for 40 days at 6.8 bar, and an energy resolution of (0.67 ± 0.08)% FWHM at 2615 keV obtained with SiPM-based electroluminescence readout.
Significance. If the quoted resolution was measured with the internal CW multiplier active, the result would establish a viable in-vessel HV generation technique compatible with low-noise SiPM readout, which is relevant for scaling xenon TPCs in neutrinoless double-beta-decay searches. The 40-day run provides evidence of operational stability.
major comments (1)
- [Abstract] Abstract: The text states that CW operation was successfully demonstrated and then reports the 40-day TPC operation plus the (0.67 ± 0.08)% resolution without explicitly confirming that the resolution datum was acquired while the CW multiplier was supplying the drift field. This linkage is required to substantiate the claim that internal placement introduces no measurable electronic noise or interference to the SiPM readout.
minor comments (1)
- [Abstract] Abstract: 'elecrtoluminescence' is a typographical error and should read 'electroluminescence'.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their review and for highlighting the need for explicit linkage in the abstract between the CW multiplier operation and the reported energy resolution. We address the comment below.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: The text states that CW operation was successfully demonstrated and then reports the 40-day TPC operation plus the (0.67 ± 0.08)% resolution without explicitly confirming that the resolution datum was acquired while the CW multiplier was supplying the drift field. This linkage is required to substantiate the claim that internal placement introduces no measurable electronic noise or interference to the SiPM readout.
Authors: We agree that the abstract as written does not explicitly state that the quoted energy resolution was acquired while the internal CW multiplier was active and supplying the drift field. The manuscript body describes the 40-day run with the CW in operation and presents the resolution result in that context, but the abstract requires clarification to make the connection unambiguous. In the revised version we will update the abstract to read: 'Operation of the CW multiplier was successfully demonstrated; the TPC was operated for 40 days at 6.8 bar with the CW supplying the drift field, and an energy resolution as high as (0.67 ± 0.08)% (FWHM) at 2615 keV was obtained.' This revision directly addresses the referee's concern without altering any numerical results. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity: pure experimental demonstration with measured performance metrics
full rationale
The paper reports hardware development and direct experimental operation of a TPC with an internal CW multiplier over 40 days, including a measured energy resolution of (0.67 ± 0.08)% FWHM at 2615 keV. No derivation chain, equations, fitted parameters presented as predictions, or self-citations of uniqueness theorems appear in the provided text. The central claims rest on observed run data and resolution, which are independent of any internal reduction to inputs by construction.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
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discussion (0)
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