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Old Dominion University

Accelerating gradients

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Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Measurements Of Magnetic Field Penetration In Superconducting Materials For Srf Cavities, Iresha Harshani Senevirathne, Alex Gurevich, Jean R. Delayen, A.-M. Valente-Feliciano Jan 2021

Measurements Of Magnetic Field Penetration In Superconducting Materials For Srf Cavities, Iresha Harshani Senevirathne, Alex Gurevich, Jean R. Delayen, A.-M. Valente-Feliciano

Physics Faculty Publications

Superconducting radiofrequency (SRF) cavities used in particle accelerators operate in the Meissner state. To achieve high accelerating gradients, the cavity material should stay in the Meissner state under high RF magnetic field without penetration of vortices through the cavity wall. The field onset of flux penetration into a superconductor is an important parameter of merit of alternative superconducting materials other than Nb which can enhance the performance of SRF cavities. There is a need for a simple and efficient technique to measure the onset of field penetration into a superconductor directly. We have developed a Hall probe experimental setup for …


Measurement Of The High-Field Q Drop In The Tm010 And Te011 Modes In A Niobium Cavity, Gianluigi Ciovati, Peter Kneisel Jan 2006

Measurement Of The High-Field Q Drop In The Tm010 And Te011 Modes In A Niobium Cavity, Gianluigi Ciovati, Peter Kneisel

Physics Faculty Publications

In the last few years superconducting radio-frequency (rf) cavities made of high-purity ( residual resistivity ratio > 200) niobium achieved accelerating gradients close to the theoretical limits. An obstacle towards achieving reproducibly higher fields is represented by "anomalous'' losses causing a sharp degradation of the cavity quality factor when the peak surface magnetic field (Bp) is above about 90 mT, in the absence of field emission. This effect, called "Q drop'' has been measured in many laboratories with single- and multicell cavities mainly in the gigahertz range. In addition, a low-temperature (100 - 140 °C) "in situ'' baking of …