CHEMICAL SOAK TO REMOVE FURNACE CONTAMINATION WITHOUT DISRUPTING SURFACE OXIDE OR REMOVING BULK MATERIALS
20220364257 · 2022-11-17
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
An improved method of removing furnace contamination on niobium cavities to increase the quality factor (Q.sub.0) and the accelerating gradient (Eacc) of SRF accelerator cavities. Performing a nitric soak at or below 70% concentration removes contamination which can't be removed by conventional sulfuric/HF EP, HF soaking, which in turn can improve both Q.sub.0 and RF accelerating gradients in niobium. The chemical soak can also remove contamination from a niobium surface without removing the native oxide or bulk niobium removals, such as after infusion or mid-T baking.
Claims
1. A method of removing furnace contamination from the surface of an article of niobium (Nb) to increase the SRF quality factor (Q.sub.0) and the accelerating gradient (Eacc) without removing the native oxide or the niobium, comprising soaking the Nb article in nitric acid (HNO3).
2. The method of claim 1, comprising the nitric acid (HNO3) is at or below 70% concentration.
3. A method of removing furnace contamination from the surface of an article of niobium (Nb), comprising: doping the Nb surface with nitrogen; electropolishing (EP) the surface; and soaking the Nb article in nitric acid.
4. The method of claim 3, comprising the nitrogen doping comprises: applying nitrogen to the Nb article for at least 3 minutes; and applying vacuum for at least 60 minutes.
5. The method of claim 4, comprising the nitric acid is at or below 70% concentration.
6. The method of claim 5 comprising the niobium article is soaked at a temperature of at least 160° C.
7. The method of claim 5 comprising the niobium article is soaked at a temperature of 160° C. to 450° C.
8. The method of claim 7 comprising the niobium article is soaked while under a vacuum of less than 5 mbar.
9. The method of claim 7 comprising the niobium article is soaked while under a vacuum of 5-6 mbar.
10. The method of claim 2 comprising the niobium article is soaked at a temperature of at least 160° C.
11. The method of claim 2 comprising the niobium article is soaked at a temperature of 160° C. to 450° C.
12. The method of claim 11 comprising the niobium article is soaked while under a vacuum of less than 5 mbar.
13. The method of claim 11 comprising the niobium article is soaked while under a vacuum of 5-6 mbar.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWING(S)
[0012] Reference is made herein to the accompanying drawings, which are not necessarily drawn to scale, and wherein.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0021] The current invention is a chemical removal step removal method for niobium (Nb) that does not remove the surface oxide or remove any bulk material while advantageously removing furnace contamination. The method can be used on niobium (Nb) cavities to increase the gradient and quality factor (Q.sub.0) of SRF cavities when the niobium metal is heat-treated in the non-reducing environment (vacuum). This method will likely be highly advantageous in the future, where infusion (nanometer nitrogen) and mid-T bake cavity (nanometer oxide) production is opening new avenues for cavity processing. The meaning of the term “mid-T bake” as used herein refers to a bake at 160° C. to 450° C., or essentially raising the oven temperature to 160° C. and higher, but stopping before oxide (NbO5) dissolution occurs. Conventional niobium cavity bakes, which are typically at a range of 100° C. to 160° C., are referred to as “standard bakes” or “magic bakes”. Another conventional bake is at a range of 75° C. to 120° C. The meaning of the term “bake(s)” as used herein refers to a thermal treatment under vacuum (traditionally at a pressure less than ˜5-6 mbar), and usually inside a vacuum oven, or at lower temperatures using the cavity itself as the vacuum vessel while externally heating the cavity.
[0022] Various chemical soaks of Niobium (Nb) cavities were tested against control samples as shown in Table I below.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 FIG. Sample ID Test Condition No. SC-11-T109 Baseline (EP ~15° C. + 24 hr bake at 110° C.) FIG. 1 SC-11-T109 3N60 (EP67KC ~13° C.) FIG. 1 SC-11-T109 3N60 + HNO3 70% for 1 hour + HF for 5 hours FIG. 1 SC-14 Baseline-120° C. bake for 24 hours FIG. 2 SC-14 +925° C. anneal followed by 800° C. 3N120 FIG. 2 SC-14 +Nitric soak, 30% for one hour FIG. 2 SC-14 +Nitric soak, 50% for one hour FIG. 2 SC-08 3N60 EP5 FIG. 3 SC-08 +EP50 + 3N60 EP8 FIG. 3 SC-08 +NHO3 70% + HF x 1 FIG. 3
[0023] In multiple SRF cavity furnaces, the maximum gradient and Q.sub.0 are limited below expectations, with high variability between furnaces. This is both in high-temperature doped cavities plus light EP and in high-temperature hydrogen degassed plus nitrogen-infused or mid-T baked cavities. The goal is to increase the gradient and Q.sub.0 of SRF cavities when the metal is heat-treated in the non-reducing environment (vacuum).
[0024] The current invention is a chemical removal step that does not remove the oxide or remove any bulk material while still removing furnace contamination. This has never been shown to produce any positive result until now. This technique may be highly advantageous in the future, where infusion (nanometer nitrogen) and mid-T bake cavity (nanometer oxide) production is opening new avenues for cavity processing. The meaning of the term “mid-T bake” as used herein refers to a bake at 160° C. to 450° C. or essentially raising the bake temperature to 160° C. and higher but stopping before oxide dissolution occurs. Conventional niobium cavity bakes, which are typically at a range of 100° C. to 160° C., are referred to as “standard bakes” or “magic bakes”. Another conventional bake is at a range of 75° C. to 120° C.
[0025] With reference to
[0026] Referring to
[0027] With reference to
[0028] The chemical removal method of the present invention would be beneficial in the manufacture of SRF cavities or in processing of surface-sensitive refractory metals that requires heat treatment.
[0029] Future applications of the technology could be in superconducting niobium accelerators (ILC and EIC) as well as contemporary SRF accelerators, in thin films refractory deposition where bulk or oxide removal is not desirable and which also requires heat treatments, or in furnace-annealed refractory metals that are surface sensitive.
[0030] The method is not valid where large bulk removal is allowed, as in bulk BCP/EP of about 20 microns or more.
[0031] In multiple SRF cavity furnaces (vacuum ovens), the maximum gradient and Q.sub.0 are limited below expectations, with high variability between furnaces. This is both in high-temperature doped cavities plus light EP and in high-temperature hydrogen degassed plus nitrogen-infused or mid-T baked cavities. The meaning of the term “nitrogen doped” as used herein refers to a vacuum furnace treatment above the native oxide dissolution temperature of approximately 450° C., followed by a gas injection of nitrogen (typically at about 30 mbar) at a higher temperature (traditionally 800-1000° C.) for a short time (20 minutes) and later followed by a vacuum at or below the gas injection temperature, followed by a light EP of 5-20 microns to remove non-superconducting niobium nitride formed in the process.
[0032] With reference to
[0033] Referring to
[0034] The method is not valid where large bulk removal is allowed, as in bulk BCP/EP of about 20 microns or more, which would undercut any remaining surface contaminated by removing the metal around the contamination.