Revealing the Origin and Nature of the Buried Metal-Substrate Interface Layer in Ta/Sapphire Superconducting Films
Despite constituting a smaller fraction of the qubits electromagnetic mode, surfaces and interfaces can exert significant influence as sources of high-loss tangents, which brings forward the need to reveal properties of these extended defects and identify routes to their control. Here, we examine th...
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Zusammenfassung: | Despite constituting a smaller fraction of the qubits electromagnetic mode,
surfaces and interfaces can exert significant influence as sources of high-loss
tangents, which brings forward the need to reveal properties of these extended
defects and identify routes to their control. Here, we examine the structure
and composition of the metal-substrate interfacial layer that exists in
Ta/sapphire-based superconducting films. Synchrotron-based X-ray reflectivity
measurements of Ta films, commonly used in these qubits, reveal an unexplored
interface layer at the metal-substrate interface. Scanning transmission
electron microscopy and core-level electron energy loss spectroscopy identified
an approximately 0.65 \ \text{nm} \pm 0.05 \ \text{nm} thick intermixing layer
at the metal-substrate interface containing Al, O, and Ta atoms. Density
functional theory (DFT) modeling reveals that the structure and properties of
the Ta/sapphire heterojunctions are determined by the oxygen content on the
sapphire surface prior to Ta deposition, as discussed for the limiting cases of
Ta films on the O-rich versus Al-rich Al2O3 (0001) surface. By using a
multimodal approach, integrating various material characterization techniques
and DFT modeling, we have gained deeper insights into the interface layer
between the metal and substrate. This intermixing at the metal-substrate
interface influences their thermodynamic stability and electronic behavior,
which may affect qubit performance. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2409.10780 |