Y. Kalboussi, S. Dadouch, B. Delatte, F. Miserque, D. Dragoe, F. Eozenou, M. Baudrier, S. Tusseau-Nenez, Y. Zheng, L. Maurice, E. Cenni, Q. Bertrand, P. Sahuquet, E. Fayette, G. Jullien, C. Inguimbert, M. Belhaj, T. Proslier
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
This study investigates the use of atomic layer deposition (ALD) to mitigate multipacting phenomena inside superconducting radio frequency cavities used in particle accelerators while preserving high quality factors in the 1010 range. The unique ALD capability to control the film thickness down to the atomic level on arbitrary complex shape objects enables the fine-tuning of TiN film resistivity and total electron emission yield (TEEY) from coupons to devices. This level of control allows us to adequately choose a TiN film thickness that provides both high resistivity to prevent Ohmic losses and a low TEEY to mitigate multipacting for the application of interest. The methodology presented in this work can be scaled to other domains and devices subject to RF fields in vacuum and sensitive to multipacting or electron discharge processes with their own requirements in resistivities and TEEY values.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Applied Physics (JAP) is an influential international journal publishing significant new experimental and theoretical results of applied physics research.
Topics covered in JAP are diverse and reflect the most current applied physics research, including:
Dielectrics, ferroelectrics, and multiferroics-
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Emerging, interdisciplinary, and other fields of applied physics-
Magnetism, spintronics, and superconductivity-
Organic-Inorganic systems, including organic electronics-
Photonics, plasmonics, photovoltaics, lasers, optical materials, and phenomena-
Physics of devices and sensors-
Physics of materials, including electrical, thermal, mechanical and other properties-
Physics of matter under extreme conditions-
Physics of nanoscale and low-dimensional systems, including atomic and quantum phenomena-
Physics of semiconductors-
Soft matter, fluids, and biophysics-
Thin films, interfaces, and surfaces