DOE Award Gives Grad. Student Opportunity to Help Make Major SRF Advancements

  • College of William and Mary graduate student Matthew Burton (center left), pauses for a photo in Jefferson Lab's SRF Institute with his Advisor, R. Ale Lukaszew (center right), the W&M Virginia Microelectronics Consortium Distinguished Professor of Physics, and his Jefferson Lab Advisor, Larry Phillips. Behind them is the cavity deposition system Burton is using in his research which is aimed at improving superconducting radiofrequency thin-film capabilities. A Department of Energy Office of Science Graduat

College of William and Mary graduate student Matthew Burton (center left), pauses for a photo in Jefferson Lab's SRF Institute with his Advisor, R. Ale Lukaszew (center right), the W&M Virginia Microelectronics Consortium Distinguished Professor of Physics, and his Jefferson Lab Advisor, Larry Phillips. Behind them is the cavity deposition system Burton is using in his research which is aimed at improving superconducting radiofrequency thin-film capabilities. A Department of Energy Office of Science Graduate Student Research award is allowing Burton to carry out his research project.

For as long as Matthew Burton can remember, he has been into science. When asked how far back, he readily recalls trying to bend a laser with magnets for an elementary school science fair project.

The young researcher has always been excited by technology, and physics, he says, gave him a path into that.

After high school, he headed to James Madison University on a (science, technology, engineering and math) STEM scholarship to study fundamental physics, and then to The College of William and Mary for its Ph.D. physics program.

These days, Burton’s love of science has him at Jefferson Lab, where he’s one of three graduate students conducting research thanks to research awards from the U.S. Department of Energy.

“I grew up loving electricity and magnets,” Burton said. “Now I get to work with superconductors.”

Burton, of Chesapeake, was among 65 students from across the nation, recently awarded DOE Office of Science Graduate Student Research awards. The award, announced in December, allows Burton to work on his thesis project, “Development and Characterization of Superconducting Thin Films for SRF Accelerator Cavities.” The project focuses on using a new process to develop a new type of superconducting cavity that could be used to accelerate particles. If successful, the new design could mean a reduced-cost method of achieving improved accelerator operations.

Jefferson Lab’s Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility, or CEBAF, uses superconducting radiofrequency (SRF) technology to propel the electron beams that are used for nuclear physics experiments in the lab’s experimental halls. The accelerator uses components called superconducting cavities, to impart energy to the electron beams.

The cavities are made of niobium, a metal that has superconducting capabilities when cooled to cryogenic temperatures. Because present cavities are made of solid bulk niobium, all of that expensive material must be of the same quality as the very, very thin active surface layer. As part of Burton’s project, he is studying and measuring aspects of the performance of cavities made of a far cheaper and more readily accessible material – copper – that has a thin layer of niobium coating the inside of the cavity pipe. Modern film deposition techniques should also make quality assurance of the niobium film much easier than bulk materials.

He hopes to create cavities that work as well as pure niobium cavities.

Using copper for the cavities – which is a better heat conductor than niobium – has been tried in the past, but the cavities never worked as well as hoped, Burton said. This project, led by his JLab Advisor, Larry Phillips, involved designing and building an entirely new system from the ground up. The new system coats the interior of the cavities with a thin layer of niobium through a method called high-powered impulse magnetron sputtering (HiPIMS) to produce higher-quality niobium crystals in the film

Burton hopes to have a copper cavity lined with the niobium thin film ready to test before summer.

“The technology is very promising,” he said. “I’d say we’re close to having a completed cavity. The nice thing about science is even when things don’t work exactly as desired, we learn something new. But we expect this to work.”

No stranger to Jefferson Lab, Burton, spent his undergraduate summers working on detector systems at the lab. He chose William & Mary for graduate school because of its proximity to the lab, and has been working on thin films for about a year and a half in collaboration with lab scientists. He earned his master’s degree in 2014.

“If Matt’s work is successful, this will be a real breakthrough for the particle accelerator community,” said R. Ale Lukaszew, the Virginia Microelectronics Consortium Distinguished Professor of Physics at William & Mary, and Burton’s Ph.D. research advisor at W&M.

Burton is dedicated, driven and fully committed to his research project, said Lukaszew, who’s had the 24-year-old in her research group for the past two years. His project – which continues on work done by two previous students – could mean enabling higher accelerating fields than are presently available, she said.

Burton’s research appointment is for a year. Beyond his appointment, and eventually earning his Ph.D., he sees his options as being pretty endless. Thin films are used in a growing list of products and devices, especially in the automotive and technology industries.

Above all, he hopes his work will one day help people in some way. That is what drives him.

“The goal behind science is to help people,” Burton said. “If you’re just doing it for the fundamental science, you’re kind of missing the point. It’s always more rewarding to have an end product that will help people.”

 

By Kim O’Brien Root

Editor’s note: Additional information about Burton’s research is available in an article on the William and Mary website at: http://www.wm.edu/news/stories/2015/a-grad-student-works-toward-the-next-generation-of-particle-accelerator123.php

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DOE’s Office of Science is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States and is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, visit https://energy.gov/science