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Room temperature growth of niobium titanium alloy thin films on sapphire substrates for low loss superconducting quantum devices

ORAL

Abstract

Superconducting microwave resonators with high quality factors (high-Q) have become a key technology in a wide range of applications. The quest for materials that have low loss property at low temperatures is an area of great interest for quantum computation and photon detection. Niobium-titanium (NbTi) is a disordered superconducting alloy with a relatively high transition temperature (Tc) and has been widely used in industrial applications as practical superconducting wires. Here, we present the growth of high quality NbTi thin films on c-plane sapphire (Al2O3) substrates using room temperature magnetron sputtering techniques. We investigate the strain, crystallinity, surface morphology, and superconducting properties of NbTi films with various thicknesses. A nanoscale surface morphology exhibits a sixfold symmetric grain structure following the hexagonal Al2O3 substrate. Detailed XRD analyses revealed that the bcc NbTi with higher Tc are grown epitaxially on Al2O3 substrates with bcc (110) and (100) aligned along Al2O3 (0001) and (10-10), respectively. We found that the film quality and the concomitant superconducting property can be widely controlled by changing the sputtering conditions and relevant parameters.

Presenters

  • Manabu Tsujimoto

    AIST

Authors

  • Manabu Tsujimoto

    AIST

  • Hiroshi Takashima

    AIST

  • Yoshiyuki Yoshida

    National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, AIST

  • Mitsuho Furuse

    AIST

  • Yoshiro Urade

    AIST

  • Takahiro Yamada

    AIST

  • Kunihiro Inomata

    AIST, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST)

  • Wataru Mizubayashi

    AIST