Field emission from crystalline niobium

Appreciable suppression of field emission (FE) from metallic surfaces has been achieved by the use of improved surface cleaning techniques. In order to understand the effects of surface preparation on field emission, systematic measurements were performed on five single crystal and three large grain...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Arti Dangwal Pandey, Günter Müller, Detlef Reschke, Xenia Singer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Physical Society 2009-02-01
Series:Physical Review Special Topics. Accelerators and Beams
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.12.023501
Description
Summary:Appreciable suppression of field emission (FE) from metallic surfaces has been achieved by the use of improved surface cleaning techniques. In order to understand the effects of surface preparation on field emission, systematic measurements were performed on five single crystal and three large grain samples of high purity (RRR>300) niobium by means of atomic force microscope, x-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscope (SEM), and dc field emission scanning microscope. The samples were treated with buffered chemical polishing (BCP), half of those for 30  μm and others for 100  μm removal of surface layer, followed by a final high pressure water rinsing. These samples provided the emission at minimum surface fields of 150  MV/m and those with longer BCP treatment showed the onset of field emission at slightly higher fields. A low temperature (∼150°C) heat treatment in a high vacuum (10^{-6}  mbar) chamber for 14 hours, on a selected large grain Nb sample, gives the evidence for the grain boundary assisted FE at very high fields of 250 and 300  MV/m. Intrinsic field emission measurements on the present Nb surfaces revealed anisotropic values of work function for different orientations. Finally, an interesting correlation between sizes of all investigated emitters derived from SEM images with respect to their respective onset fields has been found, which might facilitate the quality control of superconducting radio-frequency cavities for linear accelerators.
ISSN:1098-4402