Abstract :
The performance of niobium superconducting radiofrequency (SRF) accelerator cavities is strongly impacted by the topmost several
nanometers of the active (interior) surface, especially as influenced by the final surface conditioning treatments. We examined the effect of
the most commonly employed treatment, buffered chemical polishing (BCP), on polycrystalline niobium sheet over a range of realistic solution
flow rates using electron back scatter diffraction (EBSD), stylus profilometry, atomic force microscopy, laboratory XPS and synchrotron (variable
photon energy) XPS, seeking to collect statistically significant datasets. We found that the predominant general surface orientation is (1 0 0), but
others are also present and at the atomic-level details of surface plane orientation are more complex. The post-etch surface exhibits micron-scale
roughness, whose extent does not change with treatment conditions. The outermost surface consists of a few-nm thick layer of niobium pentoxide,
whose thickness increases with solution flow rate to a maximum of 1.3–1.4 times that resulting from static solution. The standard deviation of the
roughness measurements is 30% and that of the surface composition is 5%.
Keywords :
Niobium RF cavities , Surface analysis , Chemical etching , Accelerator cavities