Field, frequency, and temperature dependencies of the surface resistance of nitrogen diffused niobium superconducting radio frequency cavities

Author:

Dhakal P.12ORCID,Khanal B. D.2ORCID,Gurevich A.2,Ciovati G.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility

2. Old Dominion University

Abstract

We investigate the rf performance of several single-cell superconducting radio-frequency cavities subjected to low temperature heat treatment in nitrogen environment. The cavities were treated at temperature 120165°C for an extended period of time (24–48 h) either in high vacuum or in a low partial pressure of ultrapure nitrogen. The improvement in Q0 with a Q rise was observed when nitrogen gas was injected at 300°C during the cavity cooldown from 800°C and held at 165°C, without any degradation in accelerating gradient over the baseline performance. The treatment was applied to several elliptical cavities with frequency ranging from 0.75 to 3.0 GHz, showing an improved quality factor as a result of low temperature nitrogen treatments. The Q rise feature is similar to that achieved by nitrogen alloying Nb cavities at higher temperature, followed by material removal by electropolishing. The surface modification was confirmed by the change in electronic mean free path and tuned with the temperature and duration of heat treatment. The decrease of the temperature-dependent surface resistance with increasing rf field, resulting in a Q rise, becomes stronger with increasing frequency and decreasing temperature. The data suggest a crossover frequency of 0.95GHz above that the Q rise phenomenon occurs at 2 K. Some of these results can be explained qualitatively with an existing model of intrinsic field-dependence of the surface resistance with both equilibrium and nonequilibrium quasiparticle distribution functions. The change in the Q slope below 0.95 GHz may result from masking contribution of trapped magnetic flux to the residual surface resistance. Published by the American Physical Society 2024

Funder

U.S. Department of Energy

Publisher

American Physical Society (APS)

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