19–24 May 2024
Music City Center
US/Central timezone

Niobium-tin as a transformative technology for low-beta linacs

WEPS09
22 May 2024, 16:00
2h
Blues (MCC Exhibit Hall A)

Blues

MCC Exhibit Hall A

Poster Presentation MC7.T07 Superconducting RF Wednesday Poster Session

Speaker

Troy Petersen (Argonne National Laboratory)

Description

Niobium-tin has been identified as the most promising next-generation superconducting material for accelerator cavities. This is due to the higher critical temperature (Tc = 18 K) of Nb3Sn compared to niobium (TC = 9.2 K), which leads to greatly reduced RF losses in the cavity during 4.5 K operation. This allows two important changes during cavity and cryomodule design. First, the higher Tc leads to negligible BCS losses when operated at 4.5 K, which allows for a higher frequency to be used, translating to significantly smaller cavities and cryomodules. Second, the reduced dissipated power lowers the required cryogenic cooling capacity, meaning that cavities can feasibly be operated on 5-10 W cryocoolers instead of a centralized helium refrigeration plant. These plants and distribution systems are costly and complex, requiring skilled technicians for operation and maintenance. These fundamental changes present an opportunity for a paradigm shift in how low-beta linacs are designed and operated. Fabrication challenges and first coated cavity test results are discussed.

Region represented North America

Primary author

Troy Petersen (Argonne National Laboratory)

Co-authors

Berardino Guilfoyle (Argonne National Laboratory) Brad Tennis (Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory) Edward Spranza (RadiaBeam Technologies) Grigory Eremeev (Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory) Michael Kelly (Argonne National Laboratory) Ronald Agustsson (RadiaBeam) Sam Posen (Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory) Sergey Kutsaev (RadiaBeam) Thomas Reid (Argonne National Laboratory)

Presentation materials

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