Newswise — NEWPORT NEWS, VA – A teenage fascination with metals has led to a prestigious early-career award for a superconducting radiofrequency (SRF) materials scientist at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility. 

Shreyas Balachandran has been chosen to receive the ICMC Cryogenic Materials Award for Excellence, presented annually to an individual under 40 who has demonstrated innovation, impact and international recognition for their work in advancing the knowledge of cryogenic materials. 

“It’s good to be recognized for what you do, but it’s a testament to people who believed in you and gave you a chance,” Balachandran said. “I’ve had excellent mentors throughout my whole journey. And I see this award as a recognition to everyone who’s been involved in all of the work that I’ve done.” 

Balachandran’s research focuses heavily on niobium, which among other applications is used to make superconducting cavities for particle beam accelerators, including Jefferson Lab’s powerful Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility, or CEBAF. CEBAF is a DOE Office of Science user facility that is the research home to more than 1,850 nuclear physicists worldwide.

Niobium cavities make up the backbone of an accelerator. They’re housed in a string of cryomodules and supercooled by liquid helium to about 2 Kelvin, or -456 Fahrenheit, to quash normal resistance and accelerate electrons as they pass through to near light-speed, delivering beams for experiments.

Niobium is critical for particle accelerators for scientific research and in materials discovery, medical treatment and environmental remediation. Scientists and engineers are constantly working to fine-tune the metal’s performance by improving its processing or combining it with other elements, such as titanium, nitrogen, tin and aluminum to create more efficient, durable and superconducting alloys and structures.

Balachandran’s work includes developing a new niobium-tantalum-hafnium alloy with applications for next-generation superconducting wires. He’s currently experimenting with Nb3Sn, a niobium-tin compound that superconducts at a higher temperature than pure niobium, which would eliminate the need for massive and expensive cryoplants and could become a game-changer one day in high-energy accelerators. While Nb3Sn is more brittle than niobium, it could eliminate the need for large and expensive cryogenic refrigeration facilities for cooling the particle accelerator cavities. That would make it a game-changer for high-energy particle accelerators.

A detective in metallurgy 

Balachandran was born and raised in Bangalore in southern India. His interest in metals was piqued during a high school competition, leading to his devouring college-level books on metallurgy. It continued as he pursued his bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering at the R.V. College of Engineering in India and at Texas A&M University in College Station, where he earned his master’s and doctorate. His doctoral thesis was on “Microstructure Development in Bulk Niobium Following Severe Plastic Deformation and Annealing.” 

With an accelerator stewardship grant from DOE, he conducted postdoctoral work at the Applied Superconductivity Center at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory (MagLab) at Florida State University in Tallahassee from 2015 to 2018. His research included material development of high-purity niobium for superconducting SRF applications for linear accelerators. 

From 2018-2022, Balachandran joined MagLab’s visiting research faculty. There, he developed the niobium-tantalum-hafnium alloy, which could be made into durable fine wires for high-powered research magnets capable of carrying about 1500 amps per millimeter squared (at 4 Kelvin, 16 Tesla). This is vastly superior to copper, considered an excellent conductor of electricity, rated at 1-5 amps per millimeter squared. The alloy is now commercially available in the U.S. and Japan. 

Balachandran and his colleagues also conducted an autopsy of failures caused by magnet assembly during the high-luminosity Large Hadron Collider upgrade at CERN in Switzerland. After independently verifying the cause of the conductor failures — and hence the magnet failures — CERN continued its upgrade.  

“I’m easily drawn towards figuring out why something is happening,” Balachandran said. ”We’re almost like a detective trying to figure out why materials do what they do.”  

Balachandran has been collaborating with Jefferson Lab since 2015 to improve the performance of niobium. He was brought on board as a materials scientist in 2022 to advance research and development of more efficient superconducting cavities for CEBAF through new processing techniques, coatings or materials. 

Cavities made of niobium-tin, for instance, could perform as well as those made of niobium, but at 4 Kelvin rather than 2 Kelvin. This difference would require far less floor space using a cryocooler to reach superconducting temperatures rather than a massive cryoplant housed in a multistory building.  

“You basically can shrink the whole system to a manageable size,” Balachandran said. “So you can have smaller, efficient machines producing beams at the same energy. That’s the direction that this whole technology is going towards. And there is much exciting work ahead of us to get there,” he said. 

The ICMC Cryogenic Materials Award for Excellence will be presented July 11 at the group’s annual conference in Honolulu, Hawaii. It comes with a cash award and an invitation for Balachandran to give a presentation about his research.

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Jefferson Science Associates, LLC, manages and operates the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility, or Jefferson Lab, for the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Science. JSA is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Southeastern Universities Research Association, Inc. (SURA). 

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.