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Alpha-Tantalum Thin Film Growth and Characterization for Qubit Applications

POSTER

Abstract

Due to its long coherence times, Tantalum has recently emerged as a material choice for superconducting Qubits. Tantalum crystallizes into two allotropes, the body-centered cubic alpha-phase, and the tetragonal beta-phase. The alpha phase is the allotrope of interest for fabricating superconducting resonators. Utilizing ultra-high vacuum sputter epitaxy we grow thin films of alpha-Ta on low-loss sapphire substrates, studying the nucleation, growth orientations, and native surface oxide as a function of thickness and annealing temperature. Trends in thin film morphology were determined via scanning probe microscopy for terrace size and shape. Utilizing triple-axis X-ray diffraction and density functional theory, we determine the nucleation, orientation, and lowest energy formations on c-plane sapphire. Transition temperatures and q-factors of films varying in phase, orientation, and thicknesses were found using millikelvin microwave transport measurements.

Presenters

  • Nathaniel Price

    Miami University

Authors

  • Nathaniel Price

    Miami University

  • Joseph P Corbett

    Miami University

  • Lakshan Don Manuwelge Don

    Miami University

  • Evgeny Mikheev

    University of Cincinnati

  • Sushant Padhye

    University of Cincinnati

  • Carter Wade

    Miami University

  • Jonathan Guerrero-Sanchez

    Centro de Nanociencias y Nanotecnologia (CNyN-UNAM), National Autonomous University of Mexico, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico UNAM, Centro de Nanociencias y Nanotecnología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Centro de Nanociencias y Nanotecnología UNAM (CNyN), Virtual Materials Modeling Laboratory, Center for Nanoscience and Nanotechnology, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Ensenada, Mexico

  • Jose Gutierrez

    National Autonomous University of Mexico