Title :
Epitaxial Growth of Sputtered Ultra-Thin NbN Layers and Junctions on Sapphire
Author :
Villegier, Jean-Claude ; Bouat, S. ; Cavalier, P. ; Setzu, R. ; De Lamaëstre, R. Espiau ; Jorel, C. ; Odier, P. ; Guillet, B. ; Mechin, L. ; Chauvat, M.P. ; Ruterana, P.
Author_Institution :
SPSMS, CEA-Grenoble, Grenoble, France
fDate :
6/1/2009 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
High crystalline quality of ultra-thin NbN layers and of NbN-MgO-NbN tri-layers, epitaxially grown by DC-magnetron sputtering in the superconducting B1-cubic phase has been achieved in a reproducible way on three different orientations of sapphire substrates i.e. R-, A- and M-planes. Significant improvements such as higher Tc, higher Jc and lower resistivity have been obtained by growing un-twined (110) oriented NbN layers on M-plane orientation of sapphire. Uniform, low roughness, 3-5 nm thick films with Tc above 12 K and Jc above 5 MA/cm2 at 4.2 K were obtained. Characterizations by TEM, AFM and X-Ray diffraction evidence that growth of un-twined NbN on M-plane lead to a better epitaxy in comparison with twinned films observed on other sapphire orientations. We observe that the reduction of the substrate temperature from 600degC to 300degC during the deposition of NbN or NbN-MgO-NbN layers thicker than 20 nm prevents the nucleation of the competing HCP NbN phase. Moreover, 1.5 nm thick AlN or MgO over-layers sputtered in-situ prevent ultra-thin NbN films degradation through aging. The formation of Nb2NyO5-x ( ~ 2.2 nm) at the unprotected NbN surface and of interfacial NbO ( ~ 0.7 nm) native oxides has been observed by XPS. It is forecasted that such improvements in ultra-thin NbN films deposited uniformly on 3 and 4 inch sapphire wafers is a key in the future development of superconducting single photon detectors, THz HEB mixers and also in low noise quantum analogical and digital Josephson devices.
Keywords :
X-ray diffraction; X-ray photoelectron spectra; ageing; atomic force microscopy; electrical resistivity; magnesium compounds; niobium compounds; sapphire; sputter deposition; superconducting epitaxial layers; superconducting junction devices; superconducting materials; superconducting photodetectors; transmission electron microscopy; AFM; Al2O3; NbN; NbN-MgO-NbN; TEM; X-ray diffraction; XPS; aging; dc-magnetron sputtering; degradation; digital Josephson devices; electrical resistivity; interfacial native oxides; low noise quantum analogical devices; sapphire substrates; size 3 nm to 5 nm; superconducting B1-cubic phase; superconducting single photon detectors; temperature 600 C to 300 C; trilayers; twinned films; ultrathin film epitaxial growth; Josephson epitaxial junctions; niobium nitride compounds; superconducting epitaxial layers; superconducting filaments and wires; thin films;
Journal_Title :
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TASC.2009.2019243