Magnetic field mapping of superconducting radio frequency cavities

ORAL

Abstract

Superconducting radio frequency (SRF) cavities are the fundamental building blocks of modern particle accelerators. Niobium is the material of choice to build such cavities. These cavities require a cryogenic cool-down to ~2 – 4 K for optimum performance minimizing RF losses on the inner cavity surface. However, temperature-independent residual losses in SRF cavities cannot be prevented entirely. One of the major sources of residual losses is trapped magnetic flux. The flux trapping mechanism depends on different factors, such as surface preparations and cool-down conditions. We have developed a diagnostic magnetic field scanning system (MFSS) using Hall probes and anisotropic magneto-resistance sensors to study the spatial distribution of trapped flux in 1.3 GHz single-cell cavities. The first result from this newly commissioned system revealed that the trapped flux on the cavity surface might redistribute with increasing RF power. The MFSS was also able to capture significant magnetic field enhancement at specific cavity locations after a quench.

*Work supported by NSF Grant 100614-010. Jlab work is supported by Jefferson Science Associates, LLC under U.S. DOE Contract No. DE-AC05-06OR23177.

Publication: planned papers

Presenters

  • Ishwari P Parajuli

    • Old Dominion University/ Jefferson lab

Authors

  • Ishwari P Parajuli

    • Old Dominion University/ Jefferson lab
  • Gianluigi Ciovati

    • Thomas Jefferson Natl Accel Facility/ODU
  • Jean R Delayen

    • Old Dominion Univ/Jefferson Lab
  • Alexander V Gurevich

    • Old Dominion University