Matthias Liepe

Professor

Overview

Radio Frequency Superconductivity, Superconducting Quantum Materials, and Accelerator Physics

My research focuses on studying the science and technology of bulk and thin-film superconductors in electromagnetic fields at low temperature and ultra-high frequencies and the application of these superconductors, e.g., in superconducting RF cavities for particle accelerators and quantum computing.

Research Focus

Superconducting radio frequency (RF) cavities are feet-long structures, providing extremely high electric field gradients (tens of MV/m) for the acceleration of charged particle beams. The electric field inside these cavities oscillates at GHz frequencies, with exceptional high quality factors of 1E10 to 1E11. By using superconducting materials operated at temperatures between 1.5K and 4K for the walls of the cavities, we can achieve such high efficiency. The evolution in the performance of superconducting cavities has revolutionized the performance and scientific reach of particle accelerators for a variety of science applications, including high-energy physics, nuclear physics, synchrotron radiation-based research, and high-power lasers. Future particle accelerators for science, industry, energy generation, and medical applications all rely on the performance we hope to achieve in next-generation superconducting RF cavities.

I am the head of Cornell’s Superconducting Radio Frequency (SRF) group, which is a world leader in the science of microwave superconductivity and its application to accelerating cavities for particle accelerators. We have an extensive, state of the art infrastructure for the design, fabrication, preparation and test of superconducting cavities. Our research program is multi-faceted with high-impact and visibility. We have established a wide range of collaborations with international and national accelerator labs as well as with industry. We are part of the NSF Center for Bright Beams (CBB), which gives our graduate students exciting opportunities for interdisciplinary collaborative research.

SRF cavities not only enable accelerator-based sciences, but they also allow measuring superconducting response under extreme conditions with very high sensitivity. They allow the study of surface resistance, critical fields, superconducting magnetic microwave shielding, and the metastability of the superheating-field barrier. They are a testing ground for the science of disorder and defects, coupling superconductivity and high fields to grain boundaries, surface anisotropy, surface oxides, and crystal orientation. My current research concentrates on the following areas:

Synthesis, characterization, and microwave surface resistance of new superconducting compound materials for SRF cavity applications
 

Current SRF cavities exclusively use niobium as superconductor and are approaching theoretical limits. However, new potentially game-changing materials (e.g. Nb3Sn, MgB2, NbN) have the potential for fields and cavity quality factors far above the niobium limit. Moving to higher-kappa, compound superconductors brings new questions: What alternative superconductors with critical temperatures higher than that of niobium can open the path towards a new generation of SRF cavities with even lower RF surface resistance and higher accelerating fields? Does the small coherence length of these superconductors limit their usefulness due to grain boundary losses or defects? How can these more complex compound superconductors be synthesized with ideal stoichiometry and defect free? Our research program on Nb3Sn is world leading and has resulted in the first ever alternative material SRF cavity to clearly outperform traditional niobium cavities.

Superheating fields in superconductors
 

The highest gradient niobium SRF cavities are operated with peak magnetic fields beyond Hc1, the field where vortices (that would cause massive losses) would penetrate in equilibrium. Operation is possible until a higher superheating field Hsh because of a surface barrier to flux penetration. Our group has done a first measurement of the full temperature dependence of the superheating field of niobium using SRF cavities and has shown that it depends strongly on the preparation of the niobium surface. Much remains unknown. How does the superheating field depend on the Fermi surface anisotropy, i.e. could optimally oriented superconducting surfaces offer higher fields in SRF cavities? How do strong-coupling effects, as present in many of the higher-temperature traditional superconductors, impact Hsh? Can defects bypass the metastable superheating-field barrier for large-kappa materials?

Processing, characterization and microwave surface resistance of the RF surface penetration layer of superconductors
 

The surface resistance of a superconductor in microwave fields is determined by a highly complex surface layer of a few 100 nm thickness (roughly the penetration depth of the field), with oxides, grain boundaries, impurities, and defects present. This surface resistance, and is observed strong field dependence, strikingly depend on the surface treatment protocol. For example, we have shown the doping of niobium with impurities can drastically reduce RF surface resistance by optimizing the electron mean free path and reducing overheating of the quasiparticles. Open questions include: What is the physics underlying the residual surface resistance at the lowest temperatures? What are the effects of surface oxides on the surface electronic structure of materials and their impact on RF cavity performance characteristics? What surface morphology and (likely) mixed metallic phases arise from electrochemical polishing of niobium? What are the sources of the observed strong field dependence of the microwave surface resistance, and how does it depend on impurity doping?

Developing the superconducting linac technology for future high-power, high energy-efficiency particle accelerators
 

In addition to designing and optimizing the cavities for future superconducting accelerators, we are developing related and technologically challenging components like RF input couplers, Higher-Order-Mode dampers and frequency tuners. We are designing, building and testing entire, complex SRF cryomodules. This work relates to a wide breath of scientific and engineering questions. A particular focus of our work is on making future particle accelerators much more energy efficient.

Current Graduate Students

Sadie Seddon-Stettler is studying novel superconducting alloy, passivation of oxides, and capping layers for applications in accelerators and quantum computing. 

Gabriel Gaitan is developing a Chemical Vapor Deposition system for coating of superconducting RF cavities with multi-layer superconductors. He will use these cavities to study novel superconducting surfaces under extreme conditions. 

Nicole Verboncoeur is exploring ultimate field limits of superconductors when exposed to GHz frequency fields, using a novel experimental setup. Her research addresses the topics of metastability, disorder, and critical fields in high kappa superconductors, especially Nb3Sn. 

Liana Shpani is advancing Nb3Sn as the next-generation material for SRF cavities that will enable energy-sustainable ("green") accelerators. She is developing and optimizing new thin-film growth methods,  and is stying the behavior of a high-kappa superconductor under extreme field conditions. 

Neil Stilin and Jake Parsons are working on very high efficiency Nb3Sn SRF cavities that will enable using SRF accelerators in industry, medicine, environmental, & security applications. They are developing a novel compact SRF cryomodule based on conduction-cooling of a high-efficiency Nb3Sn SRF cavity, leading the way to a new generation of very compact and robust SRF based accelerators. These will find use in  industry (e.g., for in-line metrology/wafer inspection; radiation crosslinking, ion implantation), for medical applications (e.g., for radionuclide production; sterilization of medical equipment), in environmental conservation (e.g., radiation processing of polluted water and flue gas emissions), in national security (e.g., for cargo x-ray imaging), at universities (e.g., for compact x-ray sources), and in quantum computing (e.g., for electron irradiation of diamond to generate nitrogen-vacancy centers).

Alumni Graduate Students

Yi Xie and Sam Posen are now scientists at Fermilab. Dan Gonnella, Ryan Porter, and James Maniscalo are scientists at SLAC, working on the LCLS-II project. Daniel Hall is a Senior Design Engineer at ASML, one of the world's leading manufacturers of chip-making equipment. Nick Valles is a Systems Engineering Manager at Raytheon. Peter Koufalis is a Superconducting Design Researcher at imec USA. Thomas Oseroff is a scientist at Cornell, working on SRF materials. 

There are many opportunities for motivated undergraduate and graduate students to get involved. Contact me if you are interested in our work and would like to know more!

Graduate Students
Gabriel Gaitan, Liana Shpani, Nicole Verboncoeur, Sadie Seddon-Stettler, Jake Parsons

Group meetings:

Tuesdays 9:00 am: SRF group planning meeting

Fridays 2:00 pm: SRF group science meeting and journal club

Wednesdays 3:30PM (biweekly): Center for Bright Beams SRF group meeting

Awards and Honors

  • Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellow, 2008-2012
  • Graduate and Professional Student Assembly (GPSA) Faculty Award, 2015

Professional Experience

  • Visiting Scientist, Cornell University, 1998-1999.  
  • Research Assistant, Deutsches Elektronen Synchrotron, DESY, Germany, 1998-2001.
  • Research Associate, Cornell University 2001-2006. 
  • Assistant Professor, Cornell University, 2006-2013.  
  • Associate Professor, Cornell University, 2013-2018. 
  • Professor, Cornell University, 2018-present.  Cornell Superconducting RF Group Leader, 2016-present.

Publications

  1. The importance of the electron mean free path for superconducting radio-frequency cavities, J. Maniscalco, D. Gonnella, M. Liepe, Journal of Applied Physics 121, 043910, (2017). http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4974909
  2. Theoretical estimates of maximum fields in superconducting resonant radio frequency cavities: stability theory, disorder, and laminates, D. B Liarte, S. Posen, M. K Transtrum, G. Catelani, M. Liepe and J. P Sethna, Superconductor Science and Technology, Volume 30, Number 3, 033002, (2017). http://stacks.iop.org/0953-2048/30/i=3/a=033002
  3. Impact of nitrogen doping of niobium superconducting cavities on the sensitivity of surface resistance to trapped magnetic flux, D. Gonnella, J. Kaufman and M. Liepe, J. Appl. Phys. 119, 073904 (2016). http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4941944
  4. Shielding Superconductors with Thin Films as Applied to rf Cavities for Particle Accelerators, S. Posen, M. K. Transtrum, G. Catelani, M. Liepe, and J. P. Sethna, Phys. Rev. Applied 4, 044019 (2015). http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevApplied.4.044019
  5. Radio Frequency Magnetic Field Limits of Nb and Nb3Sn, S. Posen, N. Valles, and M. Liepe, Phys. Rev. Lett. 115, 047001 (2015). http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.115.047001
  6. Proof-of-principle demonstration of Nb3Sn superconducting RF cavities for high Q0 applications, S. Posen, M. Liepe. D. Hall, Applied Physics Letters 106, Issue 8 (2015). http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4913247
  7. Analysis of Nb3Sn surface layers for superconducting RF cavity applications, C. Becker, S. Posen, N. Groll, R. Cook, C. M. Schlepuetz, D. Hall, M. Liepe, M. Pellin, J. Zasadzsinski, and T. Proslier, Applied Physics Letters 106, Issue 8 (2015). http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4913617
  8. Nitrogen-doped 9-cell cavity performance in a test cryomodule for LCLS-II, D. Gonnella, R. Eichhorn, F. Furuta, M. Ge, D. Hall, V. Ho, G. Hoffstaetter, M. Liepe, T. O'Connell, S. Posen, P. Quigley, J. Sears, V. Veshcherevich, A. Grassellino, A. Romanenko and D. A. Sergatskov, J. Appl. Phys. 117 , 023908 (2015). http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4905681
  9. Advances in development of Nb3Sn superconducting radio-frequency cavities, S. Posen and M. Liepe, Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams 15, 112001 (2014). http://journals.aps.org/prstab/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.17.112001
  10. The main linac cavity for Cornell's energy recovery linac: Cavity design through horizontal cryomodule prototype test, N. Valles, M. Liepe, F. Furuta, M. Gi, D. Gonnella, Y. He, K. Ho, G. Hoffstaetter, D.S. Klein, T. O'Connell, S. Posen, P. Quigley, J. Sears, G.Q. Stedman, M. Tigner, V. Veshcherevich, Nuclear Instruments Methods in Physics Research A (2013), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nima.2013.07.021 
  11. Record high-average current from a high-brightness photoinjector, B. Dunham, J. Barley, A. Bartnik, I. Bazarov, L. Cultrera, J. Dobbins, G. Hoffstaetter, B. Johnson, R. Kaplan, S. Karkare, V. Kostroun, Y. Li, M. Liepe, X. Liu, F. Loehl, J. Maxson, P. Quigley, J. Reilly, D. Rice, D. Sabol, E. Smith, K. Smolenski, M. Tigner, V. Vesherevich, D. Widger, and Z. Zhao, Appl. Phys. Lett. 102, 034105 (2013). http://link.aip.org/link/doi/10.1063/1.4789395
  12. Mechanical optimization of superconducting cavities in continuous wave operation, S. Posen and M. Liepe, Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams (2012). http://prst-ab.aps.org/abstract/PRSTAB/v15/i2/e022002  

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