(Invited) Development of Single Crystal Nbn Superconductor on Wide Bandgap GaN By Sputtering and Thermal Annealing

The field of quantum computing is rapidly evolving, and Niobium Nitride (NbN) superconductors have emerged as a pivotal component in the field of quantum computing due to their unique properties. NbN possesses relatively higher superconducting transition temperature (T c = 15-17 K) as compared to tr...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inMeeting abstracts (Electrochemical Society) Vol. MA2024-01; no. 32; p. 1582
Main Authors Bhuiyan, A F M Anhar Uddin, Margiotta, Stephen, Khan, Saleh Ahmed
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published The Electrochemical Society, Inc 09.08.2024
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN2151-2043
2151-2035
DOI10.1149/MA2024-01321582mtgabs

Cover

Loading…
Abstract The field of quantum computing is rapidly evolving, and Niobium Nitride (NbN) superconductors have emerged as a pivotal component in the field of quantum computing due to their unique properties. NbN possesses relatively higher superconducting transition temperature (T c = 15-17 K) as compared to traditional superconductors, making it a promising material for various applications, including superconductor quantum computers, single photon detectors, and hot electron bolometers [1]. The investigation of NbN's superconductivity has been a subject of extensive research over the past few decades. Given that the properties of NbN are intricately linked to its crystal structure, lattice constant, and nitrogen content, precise control of the structural and electrical characteristics of NbN films is essential for the realization of NbN based quantum devices. The (111) planes of δ-NbN exhibit relatively small lattice mismatches with group-III nitride semiconductors (~0.2% for AlN and ~2.7% for GaN) [2], suggesting the potential for integrating crystalline NbN superconductors with nitride semiconductors on a single wafer. Notably, N-polar AlGaN/GaN high electron mobility transistors have been successfully fabricated on NbN films, operating under Tc with a negative differential resistance [3], indicating that the integration of nitride semiconductors and superconductors can be harnessed to create Josephson junctions. To achieve high-quality all-nitride NbN/group-III nitride/NbN Josephson junctions, a comprehensive understanding of the NbN/GaN heterointerfaces is crucial. Despite limited reports on the epitaxial growth of NbN films on nitride semiconductors, little is known about the structural and transport properties of such NbN films. Previously, MBE growth of NbN films have been demonstrated on GaN substrate, showing superconducting critical temperatures exceeding 10 K [4]. In this presentation, our efforts on the development of single crystal NbN thin films on wide bandgap GaN substrate using cost efficient sputtering technique followed by a subsequent high-temperature annealing will be presented. Commercially available single-crystalline GaN (0001)/sapphire templates as well as differently oriented (c and a-planes) sapphire substrates are used as the substrates for the sputtered deposition of NbN films at 20 °C. After the deposition, a high temperature annealing was performed separately at 950 °C for 30 mins under Ar as well as N 2 atmosphere. While the as-deposited NbN film on GaN did not exhibit a discernible peak in the high-resolution XRD measurement, a high-intensity, single crystal (111)-oriented NbN film emerged prominently after annealing in both N 2 and Ar environments. This suggests a notable enhancement in the crystalline quality of the superconducting material attributable to the thermal annealing process. Although the crystallinity of the NbN layer improves post-annealing, there is an associated increase in grain size and surface roughness. Preliminary findings indicate a reduction in the critical temperature of the NbN film from 12.82 K to 8.69 K after high-temperature annealing, potentially linked to the incorporation of impurities and crystallographic defects during this process. Further investigations using atomic resolution transmission electron microscopy, secondary ion mass spectrometry and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy will be performed to investigate the influence of annealing duration, temperature, and conditions on the critical temperature, impurity incorporation and defect formation in NbN films deposited with different thickness. In continuation of our recent exploration into depositing crystalline superconducting NbN films on III-nitride semiconductors, this presentation will also focus on our recent advancement of ultrawide bandgap semiconductor materials such as the growth of high-quality quality β-Ga 2 O 3 films and its ternary (Al x Ga 1-x ) 2 O 3 alloys, using metalorganic (MOCVD) and low-pressure (LPCVD) chemical vapor deposition growth techniques. Ga 2 O 3 and (Al x Ga 1-x ) 2 O 3 have emerged as a promising semiconductor material platform for applications in high-power electronics and ultraviolet optoelectronics due to their excellent chemical and thermal stability, as well as high breakdown field strengths. The structural and electrical characteristics of Si-doped β-Ga 2 O 3 and (Al x Ga 1-x ) 2 O 3 thin films will be presented. Additionally, we will present recent findings on achieving phase-pure β-(Al x Ga 1-x ) 2 O 3 films with a record-high Al composition (< 99%) [5]. Our research efforts into understanding the orientation-dependent Al incorporation in β-(Al x Ga 1-x ) 2 O 3 thin films and the determination of band offsets at β-(Al x Ga 1-x ) 2 O 3 /β-Ga 2 O 3 heterostructures will be presented. Furthermore, the presentation will touch upon the heteroepitaxial development of other phases of Ga 2 O 3 and (Al x Ga 1-x ) 2 O 3 , including α, γ, and κ. Acknowledgment : Dr. Bhuiyan acknowledges the support and guidance of his PhD advisor- Dr. Hongping Zhao at The Ohio State University for the MOCVD growth and characterization of β-Ga 2 O 3 and (Al x Ga 1-x ) 2 O 3 films conducted in Zhao's group. Reference : Yamashita et al., Phys. Rev. Appl. 8, 054028 (2017). Kobayashi et al., Appl. Phys. Express 13, 061006 (2020). Yan et al., Nature 555, 183 (2018). G. Wright et al., APL Mater. 10, 051103 (2022). Bhuiyan et. al, Phys. Status Solidi RRL 17, 2300224 (2023). Figure 1
AbstractList The field of quantum computing is rapidly evolving, and Niobium Nitride (NbN) superconductors have emerged as a pivotal component in the field of quantum computing due to their unique properties. NbN possesses relatively higher superconducting transition temperature (T c = 15-17 K) as compared to traditional superconductors, making it a promising material for various applications, including superconductor quantum computers, single photon detectors, and hot electron bolometers [1]. The investigation of NbN's superconductivity has been a subject of extensive research over the past few decades. Given that the properties of NbN are intricately linked to its crystal structure, lattice constant, and nitrogen content, precise control of the structural and electrical characteristics of NbN films is essential for the realization of NbN based quantum devices. The (111) planes of δ-NbN exhibit relatively small lattice mismatches with group-III nitride semiconductors (~0.2% for AlN and ~2.7% for GaN) [2], suggesting the potential for integrating crystalline NbN superconductors with nitride semiconductors on a single wafer. Notably, N-polar AlGaN/GaN high electron mobility transistors have been successfully fabricated on NbN films, operating under Tc with a negative differential resistance [3], indicating that the integration of nitride semiconductors and superconductors can be harnessed to create Josephson junctions. To achieve high-quality all-nitride NbN/group-III nitride/NbN Josephson junctions, a comprehensive understanding of the NbN/GaN heterointerfaces is crucial. Despite limited reports on the epitaxial growth of NbN films on nitride semiconductors, little is known about the structural and transport properties of such NbN films. Previously, MBE growth of NbN films have been demonstrated on GaN substrate, showing superconducting critical temperatures exceeding 10 K [4]. In this presentation, our efforts on the development of single crystal NbN thin films on wide bandgap GaN substrate using cost efficient sputtering technique followed by a subsequent high-temperature annealing will be presented. Commercially available single-crystalline GaN (0001)/sapphire templates as well as differently oriented (c and a-planes) sapphire substrates are used as the substrates for the sputtered deposition of NbN films at 20 °C. After the deposition, a high temperature annealing was performed separately at 950 °C for 30 mins under Ar as well as N 2 atmosphere. While the as-deposited NbN film on GaN did not exhibit a discernible peak in the high-resolution XRD measurement, a high-intensity, single crystal (111)-oriented NbN film emerged prominently after annealing in both N 2 and Ar environments. This suggests a notable enhancement in the crystalline quality of the superconducting material attributable to the thermal annealing process. Although the crystallinity of the NbN layer improves post-annealing, there is an associated increase in grain size and surface roughness. Preliminary findings indicate a reduction in the critical temperature of the NbN film from 12.82 K to 8.69 K after high-temperature annealing, potentially linked to the incorporation of impurities and crystallographic defects during this process. Further investigations using atomic resolution transmission electron microscopy, secondary ion mass spectrometry and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy will be performed to investigate the influence of annealing duration, temperature, and conditions on the critical temperature, impurity incorporation and defect formation in NbN films deposited with different thickness. In continuation of our recent exploration into depositing crystalline superconducting NbN films on III-nitride semiconductors, this presentation will also focus on our recent advancement of ultrawide bandgap semiconductor materials such as the growth of high-quality quality β-Ga 2 O 3 films and its ternary (Al x Ga 1-x ) 2 O 3 alloys, using metalorganic (MOCVD) and low-pressure (LPCVD) chemical vapor deposition growth techniques. Ga 2 O 3 and (Al x Ga 1-x ) 2 O 3 have emerged as a promising semiconductor material platform for applications in high-power electronics and ultraviolet optoelectronics due to their excellent chemical and thermal stability, as well as high breakdown field strengths. The structural and electrical characteristics of Si-doped β-Ga 2 O 3 and (Al x Ga 1-x ) 2 O 3 thin films will be presented. Additionally, we will present recent findings on achieving phase-pure β-(Al x Ga 1-x ) 2 O 3 films with a record-high Al composition (< 99%) [5]. Our research efforts into understanding the orientation-dependent Al incorporation in β-(Al x Ga 1-x ) 2 O 3 thin films and the determination of band offsets at β-(Al x Ga 1-x ) 2 O 3 /β-Ga 2 O 3 heterostructures will be presented. Furthermore, the presentation will touch upon the heteroepitaxial development of other phases of Ga 2 O 3 and (Al x Ga 1-x ) 2 O 3 , including α, γ, and κ. Acknowledgment : Dr. Bhuiyan acknowledges the support and guidance of his PhD advisor- Dr. Hongping Zhao at The Ohio State University for the MOCVD growth and characterization of β-Ga 2 O 3 and (Al x Ga 1-x ) 2 O 3 films conducted in Zhao's group. Reference : Yamashita et al., Phys. Rev. Appl. 8, 054028 (2017). Kobayashi et al., Appl. Phys. Express 13, 061006 (2020). Yan et al., Nature 555, 183 (2018). G. Wright et al., APL Mater. 10, 051103 (2022). Bhuiyan et. al, Phys. Status Solidi RRL 17, 2300224 (2023). Figure 1
Author Bhuiyan, A F M Anhar Uddin
Margiotta, Stephen
Khan, Saleh Ahmed
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  givenname: A F M Anhar Uddin
  orcidid: 0000-0003-3421-2813
  surname: Bhuiyan
  fullname: Bhuiyan, A F M Anhar Uddin
  organization: University of Massachusetts Lowell
– sequence: 2
  givenname: Stephen
  surname: Margiotta
  fullname: Margiotta, Stephen
  organization: MIT Lincoln Laboratory
– sequence: 3
  givenname: Saleh Ahmed
  surname: Khan
  fullname: Khan, Saleh Ahmed
  organization: University of Massachusetts Lowell
BookMark eNqFkEtLw0AUhQepYFv9CcIsdRGdV9KZZVu1FmpdtOAyTJKbmpLMhJmkkH_vSEVw5eq--A7nngkaGWsAoVtKHigV6vFtzggTEaGc0ViypjvozF-gcZhoxAiPR7-94Fdo4v2REC4lY2Pk7tbmVHVQ3OMnOEFt2wZMh22Jd5U51ICXbvCdrvE2M3jXt-Bya4o-76zD1uCPqgC80KY46Bav9BYvBrxr-64DF3AcDnj_Ca4JAnNjQNdhe40uS117uPmpU7R_ed4vX6PN-2q9nG-iXEoflZBpwnWmkqwkkiUAYpbHohSM5rFOlBLhW14QRbKkEJowKhhPZDFTWlElgU9RfJbNnfXeQZm2rmq0G1JK0u_c0nNu6d_cAkfPXGXb9Gh7Z4LJf5gvjSl0Cw
ContentType Journal Article
Copyright 2024 ECS - The Electrochemical Society
Copyright_xml – notice: 2024 ECS - The Electrochemical Society
DBID AAYXX
CITATION
DOI 10.1149/MA2024-01321582mtgabs
DatabaseName CrossRef
DatabaseTitle CrossRef
DatabaseTitleList CrossRef
DeliveryMethod fulltext_linktorsrc
Discipline Chemistry
EISSN 2151-2035
EndPage 1582
ExternalDocumentID 10_1149_MA2024_01321582mtgabs
1582
GroupedDBID 5VS
ACHIP
ADBBV
ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS
BTFSW
CJUJL
EBS
HH5
IOP
JGOPE
KOT
N5L
O3W
OK1
REC
RHF
AAYXX
ADEQX
CITATION
ID FETCH-LOGICAL-c88s-feba03ab96bf0826ee47c54f421c5a69943213d090b6d4a02142368d79a9198e3
IEDL.DBID O3W
ISSN 2151-2043
IngestDate Tue Jul 01 00:31:14 EDT 2025
Wed Aug 21 02:06:58 EDT 2024
IsPeerReviewed false
IsScholarly false
Issue 32
Language English
License This article is available under the terms of the IOP-Standard License.
LinkModel DirectLink
MergedId FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-c88s-feba03ab96bf0826ee47c54f421c5a69943213d090b6d4a02142368d79a9198e3
ORCID 0000-0003-3421-2813
PageCount 1
ParticipantIDs crossref_primary_10_1149_MA2024_01321582mtgabs
iop_journals_10_1149_MA2024_01321582mtgabs
ProviderPackageCode CITATION
AAYXX
PublicationCentury 2000
PublicationDate 20240809
2024-08-09
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 2024-08-09
PublicationDate_xml – month: 08
  year: 2024
  text: 20240809
  day: 09
PublicationDecade 2020
PublicationTitle Meeting abstracts (Electrochemical Society)
PublicationTitleAlternate Meet. Abstr
PublicationYear 2024
Publisher The Electrochemical Society, Inc
Publisher_xml – name: The Electrochemical Society, Inc
SSID ssj0038822
Score 1.8817922
Snippet The field of quantum computing is rapidly evolving, and Niobium Nitride (NbN) superconductors have emerged as a pivotal component in the field of quantum...
SourceID crossref
iop
SourceType Index Database
Publisher
StartPage 1582
Title (Invited) Development of Single Crystal Nbn Superconductor on Wide Bandgap GaN By Sputtering and Thermal Annealing
URI https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1149/MA2024-01321582mtgabs
Volume MA2024-01
hasFullText 1
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
link http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwlV3Na8IwFA_THbbL2CdzH5LDDtugrmvaNDmqzOlgOtCht5I0iQiuLVUH_vd7_RD0sMFugSY0-eXl996D94HQnRMq6mplLI9TzwL_K7S4BK_V8Q2zFQ8dW-VRvn3a_XTfJt5kK4t_Ficl9TdgWBQKLiAsC9vyp_cmOOxZ6AQBdcWcr-VUyEUF7RNGWSbjAzLecDEB-9Ep83Z-XbqjkSrw1y0F0zlGR6VliJvFPk7Qno5O0UF705DtDKX3veg7sxAf8FaoD44NHoL-mWvcTtdg681xX0Z4uEp0Cr5uVs41TnEc4fFMadwSkZqKBL-KPm6t8TDJ-1TDcgwfMMgM8DTsAchXZHnq52jUeRm1u1bZMsEKGVtYRkthEyE5lQZ0O9Xa9UPPNa7zHHqCcu7CwYmyuS2pckVeb41Qpnwu-DNnmlygahRH-hJh4PDMe3WFIwS8a80k48a3Q86MFp5HaqixQS1IisIYQZHkzIMC5mAX5hp6BGyD8oks_p589Z_J1-iwuNYskOMGVZfpSt-CqbCUdVTpDT7quUz8AJPpubc
linkProvider IOP Publishing
linkToPdf http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwlV1bS8MwFA5zgvoiXnFe8-CDCp21abLkcRfnvE1hk_lWkiYRYbal24T9e0_XTtyDgm-BJjT5cvKdc-BcEDr1Qs18o61DBaMO-F-hIxR4rV7NcleL0HP1LMq3yzov_t0rfS2h1ncuTJwU1F-FYV4oOIewKGwrLh_r4LBnoRME1BX3PsZvUo0uE22X0DIljGay_UQGcz4mYEN6Re7Or8sXtNIS_PmHkmlvoPXCOsT1fC-bqGSiLbTanDdl20bp2W30mVmJ5_hHuA-OLe6BDhoa3EynYO8NcVdFuDdJTAr-blbSNU5xHOHBuza4ISP9JhN8I7u4McW9ZNarGpZj-IBBboCrYQ9AwDLLVd9B_fZ1v9lxirYJTsj5yLFGSZdIJZiyoN-ZMX4tpL71vauQSiaEDwcn2hWuYtqXs5prhHFdE1JcCW7ILipHcWT2EAYezzxYX3pSwts2XHFha24ouDWSUlJB1TlqQZIXxwjyRGcR5DAHizBX0AVgGxTPZPT35P3_TD5BK8-tdvBw270_QGv5DWdxHYeoPE4n5ggsh7E6ngnGF9fTvKY
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=%28Invited%29+Development+of+Single+Crystal+Nbn+Superconductor+on+Wide+Bandgap+GaN+By+Sputtering+and+Thermal+Annealing&rft.jtitle=Meeting+abstracts+%28Electrochemical+Society%29&rft.au=Bhuiyan%2C+A+F+M+Anhar+Uddin&rft.au=Margiotta%2C+Stephen&rft.au=Khan%2C+Saleh+Ahmed&rft.date=2024-08-09&rft.issn=2151-2043&rft.eissn=2151-2035&rft.volume=MA2024-01&rft.issue=32&rft.spage=1582&rft.epage=1582&rft_id=info:doi/10.1149%2FMA2024-01321582mtgabs&rft.externalDBID=n%2Fa&rft.externalDocID=10_1149_MA2024_01321582mtgabs
thumbnail_l http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=2151-2043&client=summon
thumbnail_m http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=2151-2043&client=summon
thumbnail_s http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=2151-2043&client=summon