Role of microstructure on flux expulsion of superconducting radio frequency cavities
B. D. Khanal, S. Balachandran, S. Chetri, M. Barron, R. Mullinix, A., Williams, P. Xu, A. Ingrole, P. J. Lee, G. Ciovati, and P. Dhakal

TL;DR
This study investigates how niobium microstructure influences flux expulsion in superconducting RF cavities, demonstrating that heat treatments and cold-work processes can optimize microstructure to reduce flux trapping and improve cavity performance.
Contribution
It introduces a novel fabrication approach using cold-work and heat treatment to produce microstructures that enhance flux expulsion in SRF cavities.
Findings
Bi-modal microstructure correlates with flux trapping.
Heat treatment improves flux expulsion.
Cold-work affects microstructure and flux pinning.
Abstract
The trapped residual magnetic flux during the cool-down due to the incomplete Meissner state is a significant source of radio frequency losses in superconducting radio frequency (SRF) cavities. Here, we show a clear correlation between the niobium microstructure in elliptical cavity geometry and flux expulsion behavior. In particular, a traditionally fabricated Nb cavity half cell from an annealed poly-crystalline Nb sheet after an 800 C heat treatment leads to a bi-modal microstructure that ties in with flux trapping and inefficient flux expulsion. This non-uniform microstructure is related to varying strain profiles along the cavity shape. A novel approach to prevent this non uniform microstructure is presented by fabricating a 1.3 GHz single cell Nb cavity with a cold-worked sheet and subsequent heat treatment leading to better flux expulsion after 800 C/3 h.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle accelerators and beam dynamics · Plasma Diagnostics and Applications · Gyrotron and Vacuum Electronics Research
