Superconducting properties of niobium single crystals upon annealing in vacuum at different temperatures

ORAL

Abstract

Niobium hydrides are known to be detrimental for superconducting applications. Niobium has a high affinity for hydrogen, and a significant amount of hydrogen can be accumulated during the production of niobium and fabrication devices such as RF cavities for accelerator and quantum information research. To degas hydrogen, vacuum annealing in the 600-1000 °C range is usually used. Here we use magneto-optical imaging, DC and RF susceptibility measurements to study the effects of annealing at 800°C, 1400°C, and near melting on the London penetration depth, superconducting transition temperature, upper critical field, and flux pinning. Although large hydrides (tens of micrometers) no longer appear already after 800 °C annealing, the pinning is still elevated, the transition temperature is suppressed, and the upper critical field is enhanced – all pointing to the significant presence of nanoscale defects (comparable with the coherence length ~ 20 nm). Only bringing the sample close to the melting point recovers Tc and significantly reduces pinning. This suggests that ultra-high-temperature annealing is needed to achieve the best performance of niobium devices.

* This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, National Quantum Information Science Research Centers, Superconducting Quantum Materials and Systems Center (SQMS) under contract No. DE-AC02-07CH11359. The work was performed at Ames National Laboratory which is operated for the U.S. Department of Energy by Iowa State University under Contract No. DE-AC02-07CH11358.

Presenters

  • Amlan Datta

    Iowa State University, Ames National Laboratory

Authors

  • Amlan Datta

    Iowa State University, Ames National Laboratory

  • Kamal R Joshi

    Ames National Laboratory

  • Aidan Goerdt

    Ames National Laboratory

  • Sunil Ghimire

    Iowa State University

  • Makariy A Tanatar

    Ames Laboratory/Iowa State University

  • Deborah L. Schlagel

    Division of Materials Science and Engineering, Ames Laboratory, Ames, Division of Materials Science and Engineering, Ames National Laboratory, Iowa State University

  • Giulia Berti

    Temple University

  • Maria Iavarone

    Temple University, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA, USA, FNAL Superconducting Quantum Materials and Systems Center

  • Matthew J Kramer

    Ames National Laboratory

  • Ruslan Prozorov

    Ames National Laboratory