Author: Kim, Y.-J.
Paper Title Page
TUP034
Atomic-Scale Characterization of the Subsurface Region of Niobium for SRF Cavities Using Ultraviolet Laser-assisted Atom-probe Tomography  
 
  • Y.-J. Kim, D.N. Seidman
    NU, Evanston, Illinois, USA
  • G. Ciovati, P. Dhakal, G.R. Myneni
    JLAB, Newport News, Virginia, USA
  • L.D. Cooley, A.V. Dzyuba
    Fermilab, Batavia, USA
  • R.F. Klie, T. Tao
    UIC, Chicago, USA
  • D.N. Seidman
    NUCAPT, Evanston,, USA
 
  Funding: This research was funded by USDOE (DE-AC02-07CH11359) and LEAP measurements were supported by NSF-MRI (DMR 0420532) and ONR-DURIP (N00014-0400798, N00014-0610539, N00014-0910781) programs.
Niobium is the metal of choice for SRF cavities for a linear particle accelerator because it has the highest critical temperature of any element in the periodic table and can be deformed plastically into complex geometries. Differences in the sub-surface chemistry from bulk niobium are believed to determine the high-field Q-drop. In this study, the subsurface chemistry of niobium was characterized utilizing ultraviolet laser-assisted local-electrode atom-probe (LEAP) tomography employing picosecond laser pulsing. The superior spatial resolution and analytical sensitivity of a LEAP tomograph permits us to determine the subsurface composition on an atom-by-atom and atomic {hkl} plane-by-plane basis. The 3-D reconstructions from the LEAP tomographic analyses demonstrate different behaviors for Nb-oxides and Nb-hydrides in pure niobium as well as interactions with structural imperfections, dislocations and grain boundaries in SRF-grade Nb coupon material. Additionally, the chemistry and crystallographic structure of subsurface interstitial atoms were analyzed based on energy shifts of electron energy-loss spectroscopy in conjunction with a scanning transmission electron microscopy.