Krypton-sputtered tantalum films for scalable high-performance quantum devices
read the original abstract
Superconducting qubits based on tantalum (Ta) thin films have demonstrated the highest-performing microwave resonators and qubits. This makes Ta an attractive material for superconducting quantum computing applications, but, so far, direct deposition has largely relied on high substrate temperatures exceeding \SI{400}{\celsius} to achieve the body-centered cubic phase, BCC (\textalpha-Ta). This leads to compatibility issues for scalable fabrication leveraging standard semiconductor fabrication lines. Here, we show that changing the sputter gas from argon (Ar) to krypton (Kr) promotes BCC Ta synthesis on silicon (Si) at temperatures as low as \SI{200}{\celsius}, providing a wide process window compatible with back-end-of-the-line fabrication standards. Furthermore, we find these films to have substantially higher electronic conductivity, consistent with clean-limit superconductivity. We validated the microwave performance through coplanar waveguide resonator measurements, finding that films deposited at \SI{250}{\celsius} and \SI{350}{\celsius} exhibit a tight performance distribution at the state of the art. Higher temperature-grown films exhibit higher losses, in correlation with the degree of Ta/Si intermixing revealed by cross-sectional transmission electron microscopy. Finally, with these films, we demonstrate transmon qubits with a relatively compact, \SI{20}{\micro\meter} capacitor gap, achieving a median quality factor up to 14 million.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 2 Pith papers
-
Resist-free shadow deposition using silicon trenches for Josephson junctions in superconducting qubits
A resist-free silicon-trench shadow deposition method fabricates Al-AlOx-Al Josephson junctions and qubits with median relaxation times up to 184 microseconds and minimal substrate-metal contamination.
-
Resist-free shadow deposition using silicon trenches for Josephson junctions in superconducting qubits
Resist-free shadow deposition via etched silicon trenches produces Al-AlOx-Al Josephson junctions with median qubit energy relaxation times of 184 microseconds and minimal substrate-metal interface contamination.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.