7–12 May 2023
Venice, Italy
Europe/Zurich timezone

XRR Analysis of Al2O3 coated and mid-T heat treated niobium for future implementation in SIS-based SRF cavities

WEPA195
10 May 2023, 16:30
2h
Salone Adriatico

Salone Adriatico

Poster Presentation MC7.T07: Superconducting RF Wednesday Poster Session

Speaker

Artem Zaidman (University of Hamburg)

Description

Superconducting radio-frequency cavities made out of niobium form the fundamental block of modern particle accelerators. A model proposed by Gurevich [1] suggests the use of a superconductor-insulator-superconductor (SIS) structure to achieve higher accelerating fields and a reduced surface resistance beyond the thermodynamic limits of Nb. As a first step to pursue this approach, a single-cell cavity was coated with a thin Al2O3 film via atomic layer deposition (ALD) to create an insulating layer [2] and baked for 3h at 300°C (mid-T heat treatment) [3]. In parallel, a mechanically polished two-grain-Nb sample was treated and coated analogically to the cavity. To further understand the RF performance of the coated and annealed cavity, an XRR analysis of the sample was carried out at each processing step to follow the changes in the niobium native oxides at process conditions (120°C) and throughout the chemical deposition and show that the coating technique and the resulting structure form a viable way for a further tailoring of cavity properties.

Funding Agency

This work was supported by the BMBF under the research grants 05K19GUB and 05H2021.

Footnotes

[1] A. Gurevich, Appl. Phys. Lett. 88, 012511 (2006)
[2] M. Wenskat, Supercond. Sci. Technol. (2022)
[3] S. Posen, et al., Phys. Rev. Applied 13, 014024 (2020)

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Primary author

Artem Zaidman (University of Hamburg)

Co-authors

Andreas Stierle (University of Hamburg) Getnet Deyu (University of Hamburg) Lea Steder (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron) Marc Wenskat (University of Hamburg) Rezvan Ghanbari (University of Hamburg) Robert Blick (University of Hamburg) Robert Zierold (University of Hamburg) Thomas Keller (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron) Vedran Vonk (DESY Nanolab) Wolfgang Hillert (University of Hamburg)

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