Title: INVESTIGATION OF NON-EVAPORABLE GETTER FILMS
1INVESTIGATION OF NON-EVAPORABLE GETTER FILMS
- O. B. Malyshev, K.J. Middleman,
- A. Hannah and S. Patel
- ASTeC Vacuum Science Group, STFC Daresbury
Laboratory, UK - J.S. Colligon, R. Valizadeh and V. Vishnyakov
- Department of Chemistry,
- Manchester Metropolitan University, UK
2What are usual considerations for vacuum
- Required pressure P is defined by gas desorption
Q in the vessel and effective pumping speed Seff.
- In a simple case it is
P
Q
U (l/s)
Pump, S (l/s)
Thermal, photon, electron and ion stimulated
desorption
3Usual accelerator vacuum chamber
- Average pressure depends on vacuum conductance u
of the beam vacuum chamber, which depends on the
cross section and the length L
4Vacuum chamber with a distributed pump
B
- SIP in dipole and quadrupole magnetic field
- Does not pump when magnets off
- Requires HV supply
- Getter strip in LEP at CERN
- Does not pump Noble gases and CxHy
- Requires activation
5NEG coated vacuum chamber
- Non-Evaporable Getter (NEG) coating magnetron
sputtered onto the inner walls recent innovation
technique developed at CERN and is an attractive
solution for many UHV applications. - One such application is in the vacuum systems of
particle accelerators that have to be designed so
as to provide sufficiently low pressure in the
beam pipe during machine operation - NEG film have to be optimised to exhibit low
photon, electron and ion stimulated desorption
yields and reduce secondary electron emission. - Pumping speed and capacity are important
parameters for design. - There are a number of issues which are still not
yet fully understood to engineer, to optimise and
to use such coatings.
6Why Do We Want to Coat the Chambers with NEG?
- Accelerator chambers have limited conductance of
a few l/(s?m). Especially in the insertion device
chambers with gaps of 10mm. - Need 10-10 mbar to reduce Bremsstrahlung
radiation ? Linear pumping - Photons and charged particles will desorb
electrons and molecules and impact the lifetime
and stability of the beam
7Source of Gas in a Vacuum System
Vacuum Subsurface Bulk
layers
- Thermal ,photon, electron or ion stimulated
desorption - Molecules diffusing through the bulk material
(mainly subsurface layers) of the vacuum chamber,
entering the surface and desorbing from it - Molecules adsorbed on the surface (initially or
after the air venting) and desorbing when vacuum
chamber is pumped -
- Outgassing rate depends on many factors
choice of material, cleaning procedure, pumping
time, bombardment (irradiation) dose, etc...
8What NEG coating does
Vacuum NEG Subsurface Bulk
Coating Layers
- A pure metal film 1?m thick without
contaminants. - A barrier for molecules from the bulk of vacuum
chamber. - A sorbing surface of entire vacuum chamber
surface
9Stainless steel vs NEG coated vacuum chamber
under SR
10Study and optimising the NEG coatings
- Collaboration between ASTeC and MMU was set-up
- Surface science
- NEG film deposition (existing and new
technologies) - NEG film surface analysis with SEM, XPS, RBS,
etc. - Vacuum science
- Pumping properties evaluation
- Gas dynamics modelling
- Photon, electron, ion stimulated desorption
- PEY and SEY
- Application to accelerator design (coating
geometry, pumping scheme, activation procedure,
etc.) - Gas dynamic model in accelerator beam chamber
11Why Do We Want to Coat the Chambers with NEG?
- ? ? e-, M ? ?P ? ?, BS
- e- ? e- (SEY), M ? ?P ? ?, and cause multipacting
and e-cloud - in e hadron machine
- M ? ?P ? ?, stability
- NEG coated surface will
- reduce the surface desorption yields induced by
photons ?, electrons e- and ions M - provide pumping which in turn minimizing the
desorption - provide low SEY to suppress multipacting (which
reduces electron stimulated desorption flux) and
e-cloud
12NEG coating is a technology for UHV and XHV
The CO capacity of the NEG coating is about 1
monolayer for CO and CO2
- If pressure during activation is 10-9 mbar, then
the amount of molecules hitting the wall is an
equivalent of - If pressure of NEG-sorbing gases (CO, CO2, H2O)
during activation - P gt 10-10 mbar gt
- the NEG film is continuously poisoning by these
gases gt - the activation is not full
13The conditions for NEG film activation
- To allow NEG film to be activated and not to be
poisoned by residual gas molecules for the
duration of the experiment - The background pressure due to thermal desorption
from uncoated part should be better than 10-11
mbar for CO, CO2, H2O, O2 and N2 - NEG film activation must be performed only after
the bakeout of the uncoated parts of vacuum
chamber, when desorption from uncoated parts of
the test system is low - the temperature of the test chamber and the NEG
coated sample should be maintained independently
(separate heaters and air or water cooling). - The area and capacity of uncoated parts should be
much smaller than NEG coated one to avoid NEG
saturation during and after (re-)activation for
the duration of time until the gas injection
experiment started. - No short pressure increase can be tolerated
after NEG coating activation. - ex. to switching on the gauge and the RGA, by
opening or closing a valve, etc.
14Sample deposition
Solenoid magnetron deposition
Planar magnetron deposition
15Set-up for NEG pumping evaluation
Sticking probability ? is calculated from
pressure measurements during gas injection using
the results of TPMC
16Usual activation procedure
17Reducing of CO, CO2 and H2O pressure in the open
geometry set-up
- There is an area where temperature changes from
the temperature of the NEG coated sample TNEG to
the temperature of the rest of vacuum chamber
TVC - During the set-up bake-out this are is
under-baked - During the NEG activation this area temperature
is higher than TVC and outgases. It might be the
main source of gas.
Area with transitional temperature
Cooling channel
TNEG TVC
Test sample with NEG coating
18ASTeC activation procedure
19NEG film density
- Four TiZrV coated cup sample were prepared
- Cup 1 thin and columnar
- Cup 2 two times thicker and columnar
- Cup 3 4 dense and thick as Cup 2
20Cap 3
21Comparison of three samples
- Thin - Thick - Dense
22SEM images of films
Cup 1 2 Cup 3 and 4 columnar dense
23NEG film composition
- Different combination of Ti, Zr, V and Hf
- Same deposition parameters
- Binary, ternary and quadruple alloys
24TiV binary alloy coating
25Triple alloy coating
TiZrV TiHfV
26TiZrHfV quadruple alloy coating
27Binary alloy coatings TiV, TiZr, ZrV
28Ternary alloy coatings
29TiZrHfV quadruple alloy coating
30Application to ILC
- Pressure along the arc
- inside an aluminium tube
- Bakeout at 220?C
- A pump with 200 l/s every 5 m
- H2, CO and CO2
- Inside NEG coated tube
- Activation at 160-180 ?C
- A pump with 20 l/s every 30-40 m
- H2 and CH4
31Conclusions
- New bakeout/activation procedure developed at
ASTeC to minimise the NEG film poisoning from
uncoated parts. - Measured results dont depend on injected gas
flow rate. - Columnar NEG structure, required for higher
pumping speed and sorption capacity, is formed at
higher pressure. - Reduced pumping speed and sorption capacity
measured for dense films deposited either at
lower pressures or by pulsed sputtering. - Larger number of element in the target allows
reducing the grain size of the film which, in
turn, increase the molecule diffusion along grain
boundaries and led to a lower activation
temperature. - All together allows engineering the films with
different properties
32Future investigations
- New understanding of physics and chemistry of the
NEG coating allows to the next stage - engineering of NEG coating with necessary
properties - Study dynamic properties of new coatings such as
- NEG as low dynamic outgassing
- NEG as low SEY coating
- Combination of both
-
- Accumulated experience allows
- Designing vacuum systems of new accelerators
considering NEG coating and applying it where it
is beneficial (DLS, ILC, NLS, FAIR, CLIC) - Using the NEG coating in the appropriate way.