1. Introduction
The accelerating gradient is one of the major limiting factors of cavities in radio frequency (RF) particle accelerators. In large-scale experiments, it definitively determines the cost and thus the viability of linear colliders in high energy physics projects, such as the CERN-based Compact Linear Collider (CLIC) [
1], or high brightness electron sources used in free electron lasers (FELs), such as the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) [
2]. In room-scale cost-effective setups, light sources benefit from high brightness beams to meet with applications of great interest among the structural dynamics imaging community [
3].
The main maximum field intensity limitation is due to the RF vacuum breakdown in copper cavities [
4]. Breakdown is pointed to be the origin of irreversible damage on the cavity surface, leading to quality factor (
) degradation [
5]. The current interpretation of the beginning of breakdowns points to movements of crystal defects induced by periodic thermo-mechanical stresses (known as pulse heating). Indeed, there is experimental evidence [
5,
6] supporting the pulse heating hypothesis, based on the operation at cryogenics to reduce the copper thermal expansion coefficient and simultaneously increase the yield strength, and so the material hardness. However, the phenomenon acting as a definitive breakdown trigger has been a fact of discussion for years (see chronologically [
5,
7]): it is widely accepted that first breakdowns originate from dust particle heating and high field-enhanced factor features favored by surface gas desorption. In those cases, the appropriate RF conditioning eventually leads to surpass such breakdowns. Beyond that, the breakdowns are not fully understood. Nevertheless, there are accurate analytical estimations [
8] preferably in favor of the formation enthalpy of defects when the electric field exceeds the tensile strength of copper causing the breakdown. The corresponding model can explain the breakdown rate (BDR) power law
with
seen in experiments [
6]. At such high fields (
), and accounting for the field enhancement factor derived from field emitted currents (≈30), the binding potential of atoms is exceeded and dark currents can directly melt copper. Consequently, reducing dark currents may be critical to prevent the cavity from breakdowns and avoid the subsequent damage.
In order to reduce the BDR, different strategies have been proposed [
9]: on one hand, there is potential in engineering the next generation of high brightness electron sources at higher frequencies so that the time pulse (
) is reduced, and thus the pulse heating. On the other hand, the use of non-annealed harder copper alloys (CuAg, CuCr, and CuZr) could mitigate the surface damage caused by breakdowns. With the same purpose, different experiments using hybrid accelerating structures made of copper at the cavity walls and molybdenum at the irises were carried out; first at the CLIC Test Facility [
10] resulting in an appreciable improvement on the maximum achievable
before the breakdown; and then at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Centre (SLAC) [
11] with no clear advantages with respect to the same structures made of copper. Despite these attempts, so far the issues related to the intrinsic relative work function of copper and its role in triggering breakdowns are not demonstrated. Nevertheless, it was proved [
12] that dark current beam loading plays a fundamental role in describing the
degradation observed when pulsing the cavity for a constant accelerating field (
). Having this in mind, a straightforward path to reduce the Fowler–Nordheim currents [
13] consists in growing coatings characterized by augmented local work function (WF), which may hint at the final cause of breakdowns. This constitutes the main motivation of the previous works [
14,
15] pursuing the implementation of those coatings in high-gradient accelerating structures.
Among Transition Metal Oxides (TMO), molybdenum trioxide MoO
, in the form of thin-films grown at room temperature by solid phase deposition on polycrystalline Cu, exhibits interesting properties for coating accelerating structures [
16]: (i) they exhibit an amorphous orthorhombic phase (
-MoO
), characterized by a noticeably augmented and relatively invariant WF (
) with respect to copper (
):
in
of MoO
coating on copper; (ii) the transport properties may be finely tuned by varying the film thickness. While coating layers of (
) nm show metallic behavior, thicker films behave as semiconductors. For accelerating cavities, an homogeneous metallic film is desired to avoid the accelerating field degradation, so MoO
thin-films are preferred; (iii) the grain-like morphology (average grain radius ∼50
), and the RMS roughness (∼3
) is appreciably lower than that of polished polycrystalline copper (∼7
), a very interesting feature to avoid the discharge since tips and roughness are thought to more easily trigger the breakdown; and (iv) hardness and reduced modulus are interestingly similar to copper to equally shield the cavity from secondary breakdowns.
Keeping the points (i)–(iv) above in mind, MoO metallic thin-films () deposited on copper meet a priori the requirements to mitigate trigger breakdowns which determine dark currents, with negligible impact on the accelerating field. Whether this hypothesis is confirmed, the cavity coating will allow to push at a fixed (low) BDR.
Nevertheless, two important issues should be tackled: (i) it is crucial to evaluate precisely how the metallic film deteriorates
for the practical application; (ii) since the transport properties are sensible to the film thickness, it is likewise important to evaluate the sensitivity of the cavity
with thickness and conductivity/resistivity of MoO
. With these goals, a parametric study evaluating the impact of both thickness (within the proved metallic range [
16]) and resistivity of MoO
metallic coatings on the cavity parameters is here presented. This study is presented as the necessary continuation of the previous studies on the matter [
14,
15] towards the final implementation of these coatings to validate the usefulness in high-gradient accelerating structures. Formally, the analysis is equivalent to the one presented in [
17] regarding superconducting thin-films, for the limit case in which no dielectric substrate is considered between the film and the metallic cover.
The paper is organized as follows:
Section 2 is dedicated to introduce the physical model for the analysis. In
Section 3, the numerical results regarding the study cases are presented. In order to prove the validity of those results, an experimental section is included in
Section 4. Finally,
Section 5 summarizes the conclusions emphasizing the practical inferences.
3. Results
The two examples to be studied, one in the X-band (as the accelerating structure used in Cryo-Cu-SLAC-#2 [
5]), and the other one in the Ka-band (as that used in a Compact Light XLS [
23]), reported in
Table 1, are of particular interest for both experimental evaluation and future practical application. A pill-box cavity is used to compare the performance of the MoO
-film and the bulk-Cu, taking the fundamental mode (TM
) [
20] as (
) NC particle accelerator’s benchmark. This choice does not imply a loss in practicality but a useful case study for the comparison regardless of the specific final application.
The cavity linear response is fully captured in
and
, redefined using
and
in place of
and
in Equation (
1), respectively. In
Figure 2,
and
concerning the case study in the X-band are represented as a function of the MoO
layer thickness, both parametrized by
(with
), whereas in
Figure 3 the respective functions for the case study in the Ka-band are plotted.
From the results shown in
Figure 2 and
Figure 3, the first important result of the study emerges: both
and
of the film-layered cavity essentially behave as in the bulk case when the coating consists of a thin-film, as shown experimentally in
Section 4. At the smallest thicknesses,
and
, as bulk-Cu. However, perhaps counter-intuitively, the extra losses caused by the deposited film are slightly larger when the resistivity of finite-thickness conductive MoO
is closer to that of copper, while this effect does not appear when comparing
. As a consequence, for a fixed thickness, a minimum
is reached at a finite layer conductivity, as shown in
Figure 4. These observations can be explained by the fact that the film becomes electrically thinner at lower frequencies or greater resistivity. This latter feature also favors the mismatch at the film-substrate boundary so that impinging and reflected waves tend to cancel out each other. On the contrary, as the coating becomes thicker,
naturally degrades and
increases, as shown in
Figure 5 for the
case (in general, the quality factor degradation and frequency shifting are more noticeable at a higher frequency). As expected, in the bulk case the curves tend to saturate close to the bulk copper case as
. Notice that the
curves intersect due to the opposite arrangement in the thin-film and bulk cases. This occurs because highly resistive metal coatings in the thin-film regime yields the copper performance with good approximation.
Additionally, as a second important result of this work, it is worth stressing that both
and
are not very sensitive to film properties, in terms of resistivity (defined as
and
; those derivatives are minor with respect to
and
, respectively) and thickness (defined as
and
; those derivatives are minor with respect to
and
, respectively). The
sensitivity decreases as the film is electrically thinner, whereas
sensitivity is constant with film thickness and remains practically unchanged with frequency and MoO
resistivity (these features can be appreciated directly in
Figure 2 and
Figure 4 at the lowest thicknesses and largest resistivity ratios, respectively). This means that the cavity behavior would not be impacted by even relatively large inhomogeneities of the coating properties.
Finally, the validity of the model used throughout the analysis is checked in
Figure 6. As the modulus of the effective impedance of the MoO
-film is in the same order of the one regarding the bulk-Cu surface impedance, it may be safely said that the perturbation is upon the same order at both frequency bands. As the bulk-Cu is well described by means of the first-order perturbation, the same holds for the layered structure with the MoO
-film.
4. Experimental Section
This section is intended to provide an experimental validation on the negligible influence of Mo oxide thin-films deposited on copper upon the cavity quality factor. It does not constitute, however, a demonstration of the full validity of the model, but a particular output in agreement with the results presented in
Section 3. On the other hand, while the complete description of the measurement method, apparatus characteristics, and performances are thoroughly described in [
24,
25], here just the most significant aspects of the measurement procedure and the obtained results regarding the effective surface resistance (
) of Mo thin-films are reported to support the potential use in accelerating cavities. As the goal of this measurement is to demonstrate that the
of Mo oxide thin-film is indistinguishable from the
of Cu, differential measurements (
) are carried out rather than the absolute ones, also in view of the reduced measurement uncertainty this non-calibrated method entails.
A Hakki–Coleman sapphire-loaded resonator equipped with an upper open window from which the sample under test is exposed to the excited mode (TE
) is used, connected to an Anritsu 37269D Vector Network Analyzer (VNA). The employed resonator facilitates the sample mounting, so that the measurement repeatability is optimized. The measured samples are of ∼1
of bulk copper (used as reference), and ∼50
and ∼100
of Mo oxide layers deposited on copper. Each sample is mounted
times. For each mounting, the transmission scattering parameters (measured at ∼5 the full-width half-maximum (FWHM) of the resonance centered at
, and sampling the frequency span with the maximum number of points (1601) available) are fitted by means of a Lorentzian curve, as shown in
Figure 7, and described in [
24] in detail. The fitting parameter under investigation is the loaded quality factor
, which essentially comprises the losses of each component of the resonator (since the port coupling is negligible in comparison with the resonator
), including the sample under test.
The mean
(
) together with the measurement standard deviation (
) and the mean value uncertainty (
) are reported in
Table 2. From these results, it can be seen that (i) as
of the mounting with the bulk and that of the 100 nm Mo oxide coating are the same, it is already evident that those samples are indistinguishable in terms of
; and (ii) both the relatively low statistical deviation and measurement uncertainty point to the high repeatability and trueness of the experiment, respectively. Furthermore, and based on the high repeatability of the mounting, the differential measurements (with respect to copper) may be obtained once the sample geometrical factor (
) is computed. Those are also shown in
Table 2. As seen through the obtained results, the differences on
between the Mo oxide films and bulk Cu are below the measurement uncertainty (which is in the order ∼1
, as stated in [
24]), and so the potential
of the coated accelerating cavity would be close to the bulk one. Reciprocally, the minimum
that fits the
in our model is reported in
Table 2 (for
and
, taking
, as for the numerical analysis presented in
Section 3). As the true resistivity of the film is expected to be always greater than those estimated minimums, the introduced model is further proved to be valid.
5. Conclusions
In this paper, the effects of MoO coatings on the accelerating cavity parameters completely determining their linear RF response and have been thoroughly studied. For this purpose, the classical expression describing the of bulk conductors has been generalized to the case of normal conducting thin-film deposited on a metallic substrate. At the same time, the perturbation on the accelerating field introduced by the coating finite conductivity was rigorously evaluated. Then, has been numerically checked for a couple of case studies at different frequency bands. In addition, experimental results are provided proving the negligible impact of Mo oxide coatings deposited on Cu in terms of , a result which is explained by this numerical analysis and the underlying model.
The computed results show (i) relatively little impact of nm MoO metallic coatings on both and , and the magnitude of the accelerating cavity field, since at various microwave frequencies. In addition, (ii) the coated cavity performs almost sensitiveless to thickness and resistivity variations within large ranges, making the cavity performance highly robust against coating inhomogeneities. As the negligible impact on the cavity parameters is a pre-condition for the subsequent coating deposition work, these results allow for MoO as potential candidate to mitigate the BDR with origin in dark currents due to its intrinsically high WF.
As the analysis has been treated in a generalized way, and the respective parametrizations have been explored in a relatively large range, one can safely extrapolate these results to either molybdenum coatings made of different phases (e.g., molybdenum dioxide MoO
, or heterogeneous molybdenum metallic films [
26]) or other conductive materials.