Revealing the Origin and Nature of the Buried Metal‐Substrate Interface Layer in Ta/Sapphire Superconducting Films

Abstract Despite constituting a smaller fraction of the qubit's 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...

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Main Authors: Aswin k. Anbalagan, Rebecca Cummings, Chenyu Zhou, Junsik Mun, Vesna Stanic, Jean Jordan‐Sweet, Juntao Yao, Kim Kisslinger, Conan Weiland, Dmytro Nykypanchuk, Steven L. Hulbert, Qiang Li, Yimei Zhu, Mingzhao Liu, Peter V. Sushko, Andrew L. Walter, Andi M. Barbour
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-05-01
Series:Advanced Science
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202413058
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Summary:Abstract Despite constituting a smaller fraction of the qubit's 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 intermixing layer (≈0.65 ± 0.05 nm) at the metal‐substrate interface containing Al, O, and Ta atoms. Density functional theory 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 for two atomic terminations of sapphire. Using a multimodal approach, we gained deeper insights into the interface layer between the metal and substrate, which suggests that the orientation of deposited Ta films depend on the surface termination of sapphire. The observed elemental intermixing at the metal‐substrate interface influences the thermodynamic stability and electronic behavior of the film, which may also affect qubit performance.
ISSN:2198-3844