AVS 57th International Symposium & Exhibition
    Surface Science Wednesday Sessions
       Session SS2-WeM

Paper SS2-WeM10
Laser Nitriding for Niobium Superconducting Radio-Frequency Accelerator Cavities

Wednesday, October 20, 2010, 11:00 am, Room Santa Ana

Session: Electron, Photon and Ion Beam Induced Surface Modification
Presenter: S. Singaravelu, Old Dominion University
Authors: S. Singaravelu, Old Dominion University
J.M. Klopf, Jefferson Lab
G. Krafft, Jefferson Lab
M.J. Kelley, College of William & Mary
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Particle accelerators are a key tool for scientific research ranging from fundamental studies of matter to analytical studies at light sources. Cost-for-performance is critical, both in terms of initial capital outlay and ongoing operating expense, especially for electricity. It depends on the niobium superconducting radiofrequency (SRF) accelerator cavities at the heart of most of these machines.

Presently Nb SRF cavities operate near 1.9 K, well (and expensively) below the 4.2 K atmospheric boiling point of liquid He. Transforming the 40 nm thick active interior surface layer from Nb to delta NbN (Tc = 17 K instead of 9.2 K) appears to be a promising approach. Traditional furnace nitriding appears to have not been successful for this. Further, exposing a complete SRF cavity to the time-temperature history required for nitriding risks mechanical distortion.

Gas laser nitriding instead has been applied successfully to other metals [P.Schaaf, Prog. Mat. Sci. 47 (2002) 1]. The beam dimensions and thermal diffusion length permit modeling in one dimension to predict the time course of the surface temperature for a range of per-pulse energy densities. As with the earlier work, we chose conditions just sufficient for boiling as a reference point.

We used a Spectra Physics HIPPO nanosecond laser (l = 1064 nm, Emax= 0.392 mJ, beam spot@ 34 microns, PRF =15 – 30 kHz) to obtain an incident fluence of 1.73 - 2.15 J/cm2 for each laser pulse at the target. The target was a 50 mm diameter SRF-grade Nb disk maintained in a nitrogen atmosphere at a pressure of 550 – 625 torr and rotated at a constant speed of 9 rpm.

The materials were examined by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), electron probe microanalysis (EPMA) and x-ray diffraction (XRD). The SEM images show a sharp transition with fluence from a smooth, undulating topography to significant roughening, interpreted here as the onset of ablation. EPMA measurements of N/Nb atom ratio as a function of depth found a constant value to depths greater than the SRF active layer thickness. Certain irradiation conditions resulted in values consistent with formation of delta NbN. Under certain irradiation conditions, XRD data were consistent only with delta NbN on top of Nb metal.

Funding: authored by Jefferson Science Associates LLC under US DOE Contract De-AC05-06OR23177. We are indebted to Prof. P. Schaaf (Goettingen) for the simulation code and helpful discussions.