4.5 Article

Analysis of RF losses and material characterization of samples removed from a Nb3Sn-coated superconducting RF cavity

Journal

SUPERCONDUCTOR SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 33, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1361-6668/ab75a8

Keywords

Nb3Sn coating; SRF cavity; RF measurement; temperature mapping; electron microscopy

Funding

  1. US DOE [DE-AC05-06OR23177]
  2. US Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Nuclear Physics
  3. Office of High Energy Physics [SC0014475]

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Nb3Sn (T-C 18 K and H-Sh 400 mT) is a prospective material to replace Nb (T-C 9 K and H-sh 200 mT) in SRF accelerator cavities for significant cost reduction and performance enhancement. Because of its material properties, Nb3Sn is best employed as a thin film (coating) inside an already built RF cavity structure. A particular test cavity noted as C3C4 was a 1.5 GHz single-cell Nb cavity, coated with Nb3Sn using Sn vapor diffusion process at Jefferson Lab. Cold measurements of the coated cavity indicated the superconducting transition temperature of about 18 K. Subsequent RF measurements indicated field-dependent surface resistance both at 4.3 and 2.0 K. After initial cold measurements, the cavity RF loss distribution was studied with a thermometry mapping system. Loss regions were identified with thermometry and were cut out for material analysis. The presence of significantly thin patchy regions and other carbon-rich defects is associated with strong local field-dependent surface resistance. This paper summarizes RF and thermometry results correlated with material science findings.

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