[0001] The United States of America may have certain rights to this invention under Management
and Operating Contract No.
DE-AC05-84ER 40150 from the Department of Energy.
Field of the Invention
[0002] The present invention relates to the fabrication of niobium cavities for use in particle
accelerators and the like apparatus and more particularly to a process of fabricating
such cavities from slices or tubing of pure niobium ingot rather than niobium sheet
material.
Background of the Invention
[0003] In the prior art, niobium cavities of the type well known and used in the operation
of particle accelerators and the like apparatus have been fabricated by deep drawing
of niobium sheet produced by cold rolling and annealing ingot produced material. While
such material has proven satisfactory for use in niobium cavities, the material thus
produced exhibits several shortcomings principally related to grain size and grain
size distribution. Cold roll sheet material, for example, exhibits a relatively fine
grain structure and thus a plurality of grain boundaries that can affect its performance
in cavity operation. Cold rolled sheet also exhibits significant variation in grain
size through and along the length of the sheet material which also affects its performance
in cavities. Cast ingot niobium on the other hand exhibits large grain size and relatively
uniform grain size distribution through the body of the material. The presence of
large grains results in a reduction in the number of grain boundaries and hence enhanced
performance in the final cavity structure. Thus, if the relatively large and uniform
grain size characteristics of the "as cast" or ingot niobium could be preserved in
the formed cavity, performance would undoubtedly be improved.
[0004] In addition to the above described grain size related shortcomings of the prior art
sheet material based cavities, there are other significant shortcomings associated
with the use of cold rolled sheet material in the fabrication of niobium cavities.
Among these are: 1) the costs associated with cold rolling and annealing of niobium
to produce sheet are relatively high; 2) because of the relatively small grain sizes
exhibited by cold rolled sheet materials, their strength when heated can be unacceptably
reduced; and 3) cold rolled sheet demonstrates "memory" or "springback" characteristics
that may require extensive and expensive finishing of the formed cavity after deep
drawing to assure accurate dimensional characteristics. Such springback is due to
the presence of banding or a lack of homogeniety of grain size in the cold rolled
sheet. All of these shortcomings can be positively affected through the use of "as
cast" ingot based niobium starting materials that possess large and relatively uniform
grain size distributions.
Objects of the Invention
[0005] It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a method for fabricating
niobium cavities that possess large grains and uniform grain distribution.
[0006] It is another object of the present invention to provide a method for fabricating
niobium cavities at significantly reduced cost as compared to fabrication of such
structures from cold rolled sheet.
Summary of the Invention
[0007] According to the present invention, niobium cavities are fabricated by the deep drawing
of as cast ingot slices or tubing made from large grain ingots. This method results
in the production of niobium cavities having a minimum of grain boundaries at a significantly
reduced cost as compared to the production of such structures from cold rolled sheet.
Detailed Description
[0008] As described hereinabove, in the prior art, niobium cavities have been fabricated
by the deep drawing of cold rolled niobium sheet. Such a fabrication approach, while
producing satisfactory cavities did not result in cavities that exhibited optimum
operating characteristics, due in large part to the relatively small grain size and
the relatively wide grain size distribution exhibited by such cold rolled niobium
materials.
[0009] In an effort to improve the performance of such cavities a method was sought to find
a fabrication technique that would provide a cavity that possessed relatively large
grain size (or even single grain) with a concomitant reduction in the number of grain
boundaries and also possessed a relatively uniform grain size distribution.
[0010] It has now been discovered that fabrication of cavities in the conventional fashion
but using a starting material that comprises a sheet thickness slice or tubing_of
an ingot results in the fabrication of a cavities that exhibit the desirable grain
size and grain size distribution characteristics properties. It quite surprisingly
has been found that cavities produced as described herein demonstrate superior thermal
conductivity for thermal stability or RRR as referred to in the relevant prior art.
[0011] Thus, according to the method of the present invention, pure niobium is cast or milled
into an ingot, generally a round ingot of up to about 17 inches in diameter and up
to or beyond 6 feet in length, and the ingot cut transversely, as described below,
into slices between about 1/16 and ¼ inch thick or about the thickness of the cold
rolled sheet previously used in the prior art to fabricate such structures or into_tubing.
The slices are preferably about 1/8 inch in thickness. The slices thus obtained are
then used in the conventional deep drawing process to produce the desired half cells
and the half cells thus produced further fabricated by machining and welding into
cavities in the conventional fashion. Thus, the niobium cavities of the present invention
comprise niobium having an essentially "as-cast" grain structure except as such "as-cast"
grain structure may have been modified by cold work imparted thereto during the deep
drawing process used to form the cavity halves. An objective in the development of
the process described herein is to minimize the number of grains of niobium present
in any single cavity half. Using the process described herein, the production of cavity
halves comprising as few as one grain or crystal of niobium is possible, although
most of the cavity halves produced as described herein will comprise upwards of two
grains to perhaps as many as several hundred grains, but certainly fewer grains than
the virtually unlimited number of grains of an about 50 micron size that are present
in cavity halves fabricated from rolled sheet as described in the prior art.
[0012] The casting of niobium ingot is well known in the art and hence, no further description
of this process is presented herein. For purposes of the present invention, conventionally
cast pure niobium ingot is used. After casting, the ingot is sliced or cut transversely
to yield a thin and round piece of niobium of the general size and shape of the cold
rolled sheet commonly used for the production of cavities in the prior art or it is
cast into tubing. The "as cast" structure of the material from which the niobium cavities
of the present invention are fabricated includes no grain structure imparted by hot
or cold working of the metal (e.g. by hot or cold rolling) other than that which may
be incidental to the cold work imparted to the metal during the deep drawing process
to form the cavity halves. Thus, in the final cavity, the grain structure is essentially
that which was present in the "as cast" ingot from which the ingot slice that is converted
into the cavity half by deep drawing was cut.
[0013] Transverse slicing or cutting of the niobium ingot into sheet or tubing_may be performed
in any of a number of conventional fashions including e.g. EDM (electric discharge
machining) or even conventional sawing with, for example, a band saw. Whatever method
of cutting is used however, care must be taken to assure that the sliced or cut surfaces
exhibit satisfactory smoothness for the subsequent drawing and ironing operation.
In the case of EDM sliced material, the surfaces are relatively smooth, but in the
case of conventional sawing the surfaces will be relatively rough and may require
subsequent treatment either, for example by chemical etching, electro-polishing or
some other suitable method. As is well known in the art, chemical etching can be accomplished
through treatment of the surfaces with a mixture of hydrofluoric, nitric and phosphoric
acids.
[0014] Once a satisfactorily smooth "sheet" produced by the slicing or cutting of the ingot
and surface smoothing as just described has been obtained, it is processed in accordance
with conventional and well known deep drawing, machining and welding processes to
produce a finished cavity that exhibits the previously described enhanced properties.
[0015] There has thus been described a method for the production of large grain cavities
from pure niobium ingot that involves the casting of pure niobium ingot, transversely
slicing the ingot into slices of the approximate thickness of cold rolled niobium
sheet or tubing_and then deep drawing, machining and welding in accordance with conventional
processing techniques to produce the enhanced niobium cavities of the present invention.
[0016] As the invention has been described, it will be apparent to those skilled in the
art that the same may be varied in many ways without departing from the intended spirit
and scope of the invention, and any and all such modifications are intended to be
included within the scope of the appended claims.
1. A method for the production of niobium cavities comprising:
a) forming a pure cast niobium ingot;
b) slicing the cast niobium ingot to form slices of cast niobium ingot or tubing;
c) deep drawing the slices or tubing of cast niobium ingot into cell halves; and
d) welding the cell halves together to form a cavity.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein the slices of cast niobium ingot are produced by transversely
cutting the cast niobium ingot.
3. The method of claim 2 wherein the slices of cast niobium ingot are between about 1/16
and ¼ inch thick.
4. The method of claim 1 wherein the slices of cast niobium ingot have surfaces and the
surfaces are smoothed prior to deep drawing.
5. The method of claim 4 wherein the smoothing is accomplished by chemical etching or
electro-polishing.
6. A niobium cavity produced by a method comprising:
a) casting pure niobium ingot to form cast niobium ingot;
b) slicing the cast niobium ingot to form slices of cast niobium ingot;
c) deep drawing the slices of cast niobium ingot into cell halves; and
d) welding cell halves together to form a niobium cavity.
7. The niobium cavity of claim 6 wherein the slices of cast niobium ingot are produced
by transversely cutting the cast niobium ingot.
8. A niobium cavity half comprising niobium having an essentially as-cast grain structure.
9. The niobium cavity half of claim 8 wherein the essentially as-cast grain structure
is an as-cast grain structure modified only by cold work imparted thereto during deep-drawing
to form a cavity half.
10. The niobium cavity half of claim 8 comprising from about 1 to about several hundred
grains of a size greater than about 50 microns in diameter.
REFERENCES CITED IN THE DESCRIPTION
This list of references cited by the applicant is for the reader's convenience only.
It does not form part of the European patent document. Even though great care has
been taken in compiling the references, errors or omissions cannot be excluded and
the EPO disclaims all liability in this regard.
Patent documents cited in the description