peald/cvd for superconducting rf cavities paolo pizzol university of liverpool / stfc – daresbury...

Post on 24-Dec-2015

217 Views

Category:

Documents

3 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

PEALD/CVD for Superconducting RF cavities

Paolo PizzolUniversity of Liverpool / STFC –

Daresbury Lab

• Superconductivity Radio Frequencies and Niobium

• Chemical vapour and Atomic layer depositions

• Experimental results and planned work

2

Outline

• Superconducting Radio Frequency (SRF) cavities are manifactured using superconductive materials to reach high quality factors and high acceleration gradients.

• Niobium has the highest Critical Magnetic Field (Hc2) = more magnetic field can be accomodated before the superconductivity breaks down = higher acceleration gradients are possible.

SRF - Cavity

3

• Niobium SRF cavities are the state of the art for accelerating charged particles, but:

• copper has a better thermal conductivity than Nb à easier to cool down

• a thin film of Nb requires less material à cheaper

Niobium - Limits

4

• Problem:Modern accelerators have reached the maximum

gradient achievable by using Nb as a bulk. Over the limit of » 45 MV/m the superconductivity

breaks down!

• Aim of this study:

PhD Topic

5

Find something performing as or better than Niobium. Cheaper than Niobium. Easier to cool than Niobium.

Reliable as or more than Niobium.

• Problem:Modern accelerators have reached the maximum

gradient achievable by using Nb as a bulk. Over the limit of » 45 MV/m the superconductivity

breaks down!

• Aim of this study:

PhD Topic

6

......any suggestions?

Send them at paolo.pizzol@stfc.ac.uk

• Problem:Modern accelerators have reached the maximum

gradient achievable by using Nb as a bulk. Over the limit of » 45 MV/m the superconductivity

breaks down!

• Aim of this study:

PhD Topic

7

Developing PECVD / PEALD deposition techniques to coat copper cavities with an uniform Niobium superconductive

thin layer

The chemical precursors are introduced together in the reaction chamber

Fast: micrometers thick depositions in a few hours

Difficult to control the film thickness uniformity

Niobium chemistry requires high temperatures to work well

Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD)

8

Precursors

The chemical precursors are introduced sequentially in the reaction chamber

Ideal control over the thickness of the deposited layer

Self saturating: only the free surface of the sample interact with the precursors à high conformality

Slow technique: one cycle can last up to a minute, depositing as little as » 10 nm per hour

Surface – precursors interactions driven: the same precursors can behave differently with different substrates

Difficult to deposit monoelemental films with classic ALD à Use of Plasma allows single element deposition

Atomic Layer Deposition (ALD)

9

• Swagelok Ò ALD Valves controlled via a bespoke Arduino unit interfaced with a custom made circuit à tested down to 1 millisecond duration pulses

• «Hot walls»» reactor: the entire facility is constantly heated to 120 °C to avoid condensation

• Gas purification system: the gasses entering the facility are purified to limit the amount of contaminants in the deposition chamber (Carbon, Oxygen and water)

Experimental setup

10

The chemical side

11

The chemical side

12

Precursors under study

Niobium Pentachloride (V):• Chosen to obtain metallic Nb layer• Reacts with plasma of H+ to create thin film• Crystalline solid, vapour pressure at 150 °C to

perform ALD• Very sensitive to moisture, hydrolyzes in NbOCl3

• Requires high substrate temperature to reduce Cl contamination in the film (at least 500 °C)

Tris(diethylamido)(tert-butylimido)niobium (V)• Chosen to obtain NbN layer• Reacts with N2 plasma to create thin film• Liquid, good vapour pressure at 104 °C to perform

ALD• Sensitive to heating, start decomposing at 130 °C• Doesn’t require a high deposition temperature

(250 °C) à Suitable for deposition on copper

• First run: Nb on Si... ...unsuccessful. Too much.

• Second run: Nb on Si... ... unsuccessful. Too little.

...until run 5, when...

Deposition results

13

14

NIOBIUM

NbCl5 doesn’t grow well with CVD/ALD on silica.

Deposition results

15

Deposition results

16

Deposition results

17

18

Very homogeneous niobium film

Copper recrystallizes in bigger grains structure

19

20

• Near future– Optimize the deposition parameters:

• Gas flows• Pressure• Plasma power• Plasma position

• NOT SO near future– Obtain a «nice» sample: wider area covered– Perform in depth characterization– SRF measurements

Plan of action

21

THANK YOU FOR YOUR TIME

22

top related