Anzeige
“How much energy you can put into a particle per meter corresponds directly to how big the machine is,” says Steven Sibener, the Carl William Eisendrath Professor in Chemistry and the James Franck Institute at UChicago. This means that future accelerators must either grow to inconceivable sizes, at great costs, or they must somehow pump far more energy into each particle per meter of acceleration than modern technology will allow.
Sibener and Lance Cooley, AB’86, of the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, are working on the latter option with $1.5 million in funding from the U.S. Department of Energy. They aim to improve the efficiency of superconducting radio frequency (SRF) cavities made of niobium to accelerate beams of subatomic particles in the next generation of high-energy physics experiments.
The result could be accelerators powerful enough to open new frontiers in physics without the need for a massive increase in size.
A key to such efforts is niobium, a metallic element that becomes superconducting at very low temperatures. In fact, niobium’s superconducting characteristics are the best among the elements, providing the capacity to carry thousands of times more electric current than normal conductivity through copper. When highly pure, niobium also efficiently sheds any heat generated at flaws and defects to its cryogenic coolant. Niobium SRF cavities thus will comprise the heart of future particle accelerators, including the proposed International Linear Collider.
Enabling collider technology
“The niobium superconducting cavity is enabling technology for anything that is high-power, high-energy, or high-intensity for linear colliders,” says Cooley, the SRF Materials Group Leader at Fermilab. Cooley works with niobium cooled to 2 Kelvin (minus-455.8 degrees Fahrenheit) to maximize its superconducting characteristics. “We use superconductors because it’s friction-free electricity, which saves on the operating wall-plug power,” he says.
As an undergraduate at UChicago in the 1980s, Cooley conducted research for his senior project in the laboratory of Thomas Rosenbaum, Provost and the John T. Wilson Distinguished Service Professor in Physics. It was then that Cooley became interested in superconductivity. His interest in Fermilab and its accelerators was motivated by another UChicago faculty member, Professor Emeritus and Nobel Laureate James Cronin. Cooley arrived at Fermilab in 2007, and soon after, met Sibener to discuss niobium surface chemistry at the recommendation of mutual colleagues.
Pushing particle beams
Niobium has assumed greater importance in plans for the next round of linear colliders. The current generation of ring colliders, including Fermilab’s Tevatron and Europe’s newly operating Large Hadron Collider, use thousands of niobium-titanium superconducting magnets to steer and focus their beams of charged particles, which travel in great loops before being steered into collisions that can reveal fundamental properties of matter. Cavities are a small part of these machines, providing a momentary push to the particles each time they orbit the ring.
But linear colliders, including Stanford’s current linear accelerator, Fermilab’s proposed Project X, and the proposed ILC, string together thousands of cavities into one long line. The resulting linear accelerator creates an immense electric field to push the particle beams toward their collision in a single pass, without any need for steering and recirculating them.
The emergence of niobium SRF cavity technology over the past 20 years makes it possible for each resonating cavity to utilize superconductivity to produce high-power output through low-power input, with an estimated gain in quality factor of 100,000 over Stanford’s copper cavities. But many aspects of the system are not yet optimal.
Niobium is processed according to laboratory recipes that could benefit from a firm grounding in materials science, Cooley says. “Just how precisely a given recipe is followed depends on laboratory culture, attention to detail by individual operators, arrangement of tasks based on what is perceived to be important, and so on,” Cooley says. “The true impact of different processing steps is just beginning to emerge as the university scientists like Steve step in and produce basic understanding.”
The microscopes in Sibener’s laboratory enable researchers to observe the behavior of individual atoms. With the earlier seed grant, Sibener’s team found that niobium’s reaction with oxygen produced a variety of surface oxides and defects that suggested to Cooley and others explanations of observed changes in real-world SRF cavities.
“This is some of the purest niobium you can find in the world, actually,” says Sibener, displaying a mirror-like wafer of the material in his office at the Gordon Center for Integrative Science. His research group will closely examine the material to determine exactly which oxides and defects at the surface of niobium crystals lead to loss of superconductivity under extreme conditions.
“If the Fermilab-UChicago collaboration is successful,” says Cooley, “it will allow new types of accelerators to be built at great cost savings.”
Steve Koppes | Quelle: Newswise Science News
Weitere Informationen: www.uchicago.edu
Weitere Berichte zu: Fermilab > friction-free electricity > future particle accelerators > High-Energy Fuel > Large Hadron Collider > linear accelerator > Niobium > Physic > SRF > subatomic particle > Superconductivity
NASA's Chandra finds Milky Way's black hole grazing on asteroids
09.02.2012 | Chandra X-ray Center
New images capture 'stealth merger' of dwarf galaxies
09.02.2012 | University of California - Santa Cruz
Erstmals gezeigt, dass Atomkerne transparent werden
Einem Team von DESY-Wissenschaftlern um Dr. Ralf Röhlsberger gelang es an der hochbrillanten Synchrotronlichtquelle PETRA III, Atomkerne mit Hilfe von Röntgenlicht transparent zu machen. Sie entdeckten dabei gleichzeitig ein neues Prinzip, um einen optisch gesteuerten Schalter für Licht herzustellen, also Licht mit Licht zu beeinflussen, ein wichtiger Baustein auf dem ...
Wissenschaftler beobachten, wie Oxytocin zentrale Schaltstellen im Gehirn erreicht und das Verhalten beeinflusst
Kuschelhormon, Treuehormon, Angstlöser – häufig gebrauchte Schlagwörter für das Neuropeptid Oxytocin, das sich in den letzten Jahren als ein Stoff erwiesen hat, der unser Verhalten in zentralen Regionen des Gehirns positiv beeinflussen kann. Was jedoch bisher völlig unklar war: Wie gelangt dieser Botenstoff aus dem Hypothalamus in die Hirnbereiche, die ...
Ein neuartiger Biopolymer-Film aus Lachs-DNA mit Silber-Nanopartikeln speichert Informationen kostengünstig und umweltverträglich.
Entstanden ist das organische System in fächer- und länderübergreifender Zusammenarbeit von Wissenschaftlern des DFG-Centers for Functional Nanostructures (CFN) am KIT und des Institute of Photonics Technologies an der National Tsing Hua University in Taiwan. Der DNA-Datenspeicher eignet sich unter anderem für biotechnische Anwendungen, etwa als Bauteil in Biosensoren.
Das System ...
Bildveröffentlichung der Europäischen Südsternwarte (Garching) - Mit dem Very Large Telescope (VLT) der ESO haben das bislang detailreichste Infrarotbild der Sternkinderstube des Carinanebels aufgenommen. Es zeigt vor dem spektakulären Hintergrund einer himmlischen Landschaft auf Gas, Staub und jungen Sterne zahlreiche nie gesehene Details und zählt zu den atemberaubendsten VLT-Bildern überhaupt.
Im Herzen der südlichen Milchstraße, im Sternbild Carina (Der Schiffskiel, [1]), befindet sich in einer Entfernung von etwa 7500 Lichtjahren die Sternkinderstube des Carinanebels. Diese ausgedehnte Wolke aus leuchtendem Gas und Staub ist von der Erde aus gesehen eine der nächstgelegenen Geburtsstätten massereicher Sterne.
Der Nebel beinhaltet einige der hellsten und ...
Auf der embedded world identifizieren Wissenschaftler der Fraunhofer ESK Lücken im Funkspektrum, um diese für zusätzliche Übertragungen zu nutzen.
Der in Halle 5, Stand 5-228, vorgestellte Prototyp zeigt das Funkspektrum in einem 3D-Spektrogramm, markiert die prognostizierten Lücken und prüft deren Eintreffen. Diese Methode, Cognitive Radio, verbessert die Übertragungsqualität in einem bereits vollen Funkspektrum ohne aufwändiges, statisches Koexistenzmanagement. Ziel ist eine höhere Verfügbarkeit und Zuverlässigkeit von Funk für die Automatisierung.
...
Anzeige
Anzeige

Kaltwasserkorallen als Anpassungskünstler?
09.02.2012 | Ökologie Umwelt- Naturschutz
Wandel der Hochschulbildung in Deutschland und Professionalisierung
09.02.2012 | Studien Analysen
Ocean warming causes elephant seals to dive deeper
09.02.2012 | Biowissenschaften Chemie
7. Mannheimer Arbeitsrechtstag am 14. März mit Experten aus Theorie und Praxis
09.02.2012 | Veranstaltungsnachrichten
International Forum on Terahertz Spectroscopy and Imaging
09.02.2012 | Veranstaltungsnachrichten
Teams aus neun Ländern treffen sich an der Leibniz Universität zum 6th Hanover PreMoot
09.02.2012 | Veranstaltungsnachrichten