Revealing the role of nitrogen on hydride nucleation and stability in pure niobium using first principles calculations
P. Garg, S. Balachandran, I. Adlakha, P. J. Lee, T. R. Bieler, and K., N. Solanki

TL;DR
This study uses first principles calculations to explore how nitrogen affects hydrogen behavior and hydride stability in niobium, revealing nitrogen's role in improving superconducting properties by inhibiting hydride formation.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the atomic-level mechanisms by which nitrogen influences hydrogen diffusion and hydride stability in niobium, crucial for SRF cavity performance.
Findings
Nitrogen increases the energy barrier for hydrogen diffusion.
Nitrogen destabilizes niobium hydrides.
Nitrogen reduces covalent bonding between niobium and hydrogen.
Abstract
Niobium provides the basis for all superconducting radio frequency (SRF) cavities in use, however, hydrogen is readily absorbed by niobium during cavity fabrication and subsequent niobium hydride precipitation when cooled to cryogenic temperatures degrades its superconducting properties. In the last few years the addition of dopant elements such as nitrogen has been experimentally shown to significantly improve the quality factor of niobium SRF cavities. One of the contributors to Q degradation can be presence of hydrides, however, the underlying mechanisms associated with the kinetics of hydrogen and the thermodynamic stability of hydride precipitates in the presence of dopants are not well known. Using first principles calculations, the effects of nitrogen on the energetic preference for hydrogen to occupy interstitial sites and hydride stability are examined. In particular, the…
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