4.5 Article

Wafer-level uniformity of atomic-layer-deposited niobium nitride thin films for quantum devices

Journal

JOURNAL OF VACUUM SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY A
Volume 39, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

A V S AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1116/6.0001126

Keywords

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Funding

  1. DFG [SI 704/13-1]
  2. European Union [862660/QUANTUM E-LEAPS]

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The study found that ALD-NbN exhibits property variations across a 6-inch wafer area. Over the equivalent area of a 2-inch wafer, the maximum deviation in critical temperature is 1% and in switching current is 12%. Structural characterizations indicate that changes in crystal structure appear to be the limiting factor for larger areas.
Superconducting niobium nitride thin films are used for a variety of photon detectors, quantum devices, and superconducting electronics. Most of these applications require highly uniform films, for instance, when moving from single-pixel detectors to arrays with a large active area. Plasma-enhanced atomic layer deposition (ALD) of superconducting niobium nitride is a feasible option to produce high-quality, conformal thin films and has been demonstrated as a film deposition method to fabricate superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors before. Here, we explore the property spread of ALD-NbN across a 6-in. wafer area. Over the equivalent area of a 2-in. wafer, we measure a maximum deviation of 1% in critical temperature and 12% in switching current. Toward larger areas, structural characterizations indicate that changes in the crystal structure seem to be the limiting factor rather than film composition or impurities. The results show that ALD is suited to fabricate NbN thin films as a material for large-area detector arrays and for new detector designs and devices requiring uniform superconducting thin films with precise thickness control.

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