37 research outputs found
Mitigation of parasitic losses in thequadrupole resonator enabling directmeasurements of low residual resistancesof SRF samples
The quadrupole resonator QPR is a dedicated sample test cavity for the RF characterization of superconducting samples in a wide temperature, RF field, and frequency range. Its main purpose is high resolution measurements of the surface resistance with direct access to the residual resistance, thanks to the low frequency of the first operating quadrupole mode. In addition to the well known high resolution of the QPR, a bias of measurement data toward higher values has been observed, especially in higher harmonic quadrupole modes. Numerical studies show that this can be explained by parasitic RF losses on the adapter flange used to mount samples into the QPR. Coating several micrometers of niobium on those surfaces of the stainless steel flange that are exposed to the RF fields significantly reduced this bias, enabling a direct measurement of a residual resistance smaller than 5 n amp; 937; at 2 K and 413 MHz. A constant correction based on simulations was not feasible due to deviations from one measurement to another. However, this issue is resolved given these new result
Key directions for research and development of superconducting radio frequency cavities
Radio frequency superconductivity is a cornerstone technology for many future
HEP particle accelerators and experiments from colliders to proton drivers for
neutrino facilities to searches for dark matter. While the performance of
superconducting RF (SRF) cavities has improved significantly over the last
decades, and the SRF technology has enabled new applications, the proposed HEP
facilities and experiments pose new challenges. To address these challenges,
the field continues to generate new ideas and there seems to be a vast room for
improvements. In this paper we discuss the key research directions that are
aligned with and address the future HEP needs.Comment: contribution to Snowmass 202
European Strategy for Particle Physics -- Accelerator R&D Roadmap
The 2020 update of the European Strategy for Particle Physics emphasised the
importance of an intensified and well-coordinated programme of accelerator R&D,
supporting the design and delivery of future particle accelerators in a timely,
affordable and sustainable way. This report sets out a roadmap for European
accelerator R&D for the next five to ten years, covering five topical areas
identified in the Strategy update. The R&D objectives include: improvement of
the performance and cost-performance of magnet and radio-frequency acceleration
systems; investigations of the potential of laser / plasma acceleration and
energy-recovery linac techniques; and development of new concepts for muon
beams and muon colliders. The goal of the roadmap is to document the collective
view of the field on the next steps for the R&D programme, and to provide the
evidence base to support subsequent decisions on prioritisation, resourcing and
implementation.Comment: 270 pages, 58 figures. Editor: N. Mounet. LDG chair: D. Newbold.
Panel chairs: P. V\'edrine (HFM), S. Bousson (RF), R. Assmann (plasma), D.
Schulte (muon), M. Klein (ERL). Panel editors: B. Baudouy (HFM), L. Bottura
(HFM), S. Bousson (RF), G. Burt (RF), R. Assmann (plasma), E. Gschwendtner
(plasma), R. Ischebeck (plasma), C. Rogers (muon), D. Schulte (muon), M.
Klein (ERL