Title: SRF Surface Studies and the High Field Qslope Mystery
1SRF Surface Studies and the High Field Q-slope
Mystery
- Alexander Romanenko
- Cornell University
- CLASSE
2Outline
- High field Q-slope (HFQS) in niobium cavities
- Sharp decrease in Q-factor with field
- Empirically found cure baking at 100-120C for
28-48 hours - But explanation missing
- Interesting physics
- Understanding will significantly improve the
current cavity treatment procedure - Ways to find the explanation
- Cavity tests
- Surface studies
- Models studied
- Oxygen diffusion
- Magnetic field enhancement
- Interface tunnel exchange
- Newer ideas and experiments
3Q-slope and baking
Real Nb cavities
Ideally
HFQS is eliminated (EP) or improved (BCP) by
vacuum baking _at_100-120C for 24-48 hours
Adapted from B. Visentin (Saclay)
4High Field Q-slope - History
- Initially HFQS was called European headache
since cavities chemically polished in Europe had
it and electropolished and tested cavities at KEK
(Japan) did not have it - Difference was due to the process KEK used to
improve vacuum after high pressure rinsing
empirical HFQS cure was found by accident - 100-1400C high vacuum annealing for 24-48 hours
- Removes HFQS in EP cavities
- Improves HFQS in BCP cavities
5Temperature Mapping
Thermometry board
T-map
Nb cavity on the test stand
Thermometry boards mounted to the cavity
6Temperature Mapping
dT, mK
log(T)
Hot
Cold
log(Epk)
Epeak 50 MV/m, Hpeak 123 mT
- Non-uniformity of heating
- Some regions (hot) have higher losses Why?
7Two main directions
- Baking effect
- Study Nb samples treated similarly to cavities
- Heating non-uniformity
- Cut tested Nb cavities and analyze hot/cold
regions
8Cavity Measurements vs. Surface Studies
- Cavity measurements macro characterization
- Averaged over the whole surface characteristics
- Not possible to pinpoint the physical entity
responsible for the HFQS - Surface studies micro characterization
- Local probing of the surface
- Depth resolution of a few nm is needed
9Nb Cavity Surface
Hydrocarbons
A few monolayers
Nb2O5
2-5 nm
NbOx, xlt2.5
Nb
40 nm London penetration depth _at_ 2K
10Most popular model O
Adapted from G.Ciovati SRF07 talk
11Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry
- Very sensitive ppb detection possible
- Destructive depth profiling
- BUT
- Instrumental effects preferential sputtering of
oxygen, roughness effect on signal, chemical
information not reliable due to
sputtering-induced ion production
12ToF-SIMS results
G. Eremeev and J. Francis
5 nm
100 sec 1 nm
13Arguments against O model
- No evidence of oxygen-enriched layer underneath
oxide - No evidence of oxygen diffusion at 100-120C
baking temperature - Oxygen depth profile does not change after baking
14Magnetic field enhancement (MFE)
Chemically polished surface
Electropolished surface
Field enhancement region with enhancement factor
?, if ? H gt Hc the region becomes normal
conducting
15Arguments against
- BCP and EP cavities behave similarly before
baking - But roughness is different
- No evidence of MFE at grain boundary steps from
T-maps - Possibly overestimated the field enhancement
might be a negligible effect - No difference in roughness between hot/cold spots
16Oxide losses
Adapted from G.Ciovati SRF07 talk
One of the possible oxide-related loss mechanisms
17X-Ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy
- Elemental composition within first few nm
(except for H and He) - Chemical state information
- Sensitivity limited to about 0.1-1 at.
18No change in oxide structure
H.Tian, JLab, FNAL Material Workshop, 2007
19XPS Oxide structure
- Is non-uniformity of heating caused by oxide
structure differences? No!
Nb5
Hot
Nb0
Valence band
Hot
Cold
Cold
20Arguments against oxide models
- Oxide structure change after baking is reversible
- Namely cancelled by air exposure
- Whereas cavity Q vs. E improvement is preserved
- No difference in the oxide between hot and
cold spots
21Other aspects to explore
- Crystalline orientation of individual niobium
grains - Deformation (stress)
- Vacancies and dislocations defects of the
crystalline lattice
22Electron Backscattered Diffraction
A tool to study crystalline microstructure
- Based on diffraction of backscattered electrons
- Information depth 20-100 nm
- Crystallographic orientation mapping
- Information on crystal defects distribution
23EBSD Is grain orientation responsible? (Small
grain BCP cavity)
Hot
Cold
24Recent ideas and methods
- Scattering off magnetic impurities (i.e. Nb12O39)
T.Proslier et al., App.Phys.Let. in print - Scanning Tunneling Microscopy (STM)
- Role of dislocations, niobium vacancies and Vac-H
complexes - Positron Annihilation Spectroscopy (PAS)
- Electron Backscattered Diffraction (EBSD)
- Detailed studies of the Nb/oxide interface
- Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM)
25Conclusion
- High field Q-slope is not yet understood
- Set of possible causes is narrowing down
- Several proposed mechanisms (roughness, grain
orientation, oxide losses) have been eliminated