METHOD OF PREPARING A SURFACE OF A SINGLE CRYSTAL WAFER AS AN EPITAXIAL TEMPLATE, EPITAXIAL TEMPLATE AND DEVICE

Information

  • Patent Application
  • 20240287707
  • Publication Number
    20240287707
  • Date Filed
    July 01, 2021
    3 years ago
  • Date Published
    August 29, 2024
    3 months ago
Abstract
The invention relates to a method of preparing a surface of a bulk substrate as an epitaxial template, to an epitaxial template and to a device comprising such an epitaxial template.
Description

The invention relates to a method of preparing a surface of a bulk substrate as an epitaxial template, to an epitaxial template and to a device comprising such an epitaxial template.


Traditionally, oxide and nitride substrate wafers, e.g. sapphire wafers, are chemically cleaned and placed into an oven at up to 1200° C. in an oxygen or nitrogen atmosphere to be prepared as an epitaxial template for thin film deposition. Even the purest form of oxygen or nitrogen comprises impurities, usually on the level of 10−6 volume fraction, and once the wafers have been cut from the bulk substrate and subjected to the oxygen atmosphere, these impurities, together with readsorbed contaminations from the transfer through ambient conditions from the oven to the deposition apparatus lead to defects in the surface of the single crystal wafer. In addition, for many oxide substrates, the 1200° C. maximum temperature of the annealing oven is too low to achieve the desired optimal surface configuration with a minimum of structural defects due to the still limited surface mobility of the atoms at this temperature.


It should be noted that the bulk volume of the crystal, i.e. the bulk substrate, from which the single crystal wafer is cut is essentially defect free, it is the process of cutting the single crystal wafer that introduces atomic scale and mesoscopic defects into the surface of the single crystal wafer. Namely, on cutting the single crystal wafer from the bulk substrate, it is currently technically impossible to cut the bulk substrate directly along a plane of the crystal structure of the bulk substrate, this means that no planar single crystal wafer can be cut from the bulk substrate.


It is therefore desirable to cut the crystal as close as possible along one of its intrinsic crystal planes, such that the cut surface exposes the least possible number of formula unit high steps between crystal planes.


The sawing, grinding and polishing process also displaces atoms at or near the surface from their bulk crystal positions, thereby producing deviations from the ideal positions within the strictly periodic crystal lattice. In addition, the truncation of the crystal lattice at the surface leads to a high surface energy with non-saturated chemical bonds making the surface very reactive to foreign atoms from its surroundings. Ideally, the surface atoms should rearrange within themselves, or only with atoms of the same elements as contained in the bulk structure, to form a chemically uniform and structurally periodic, so-called reconstructed surface which represents the best possible template for the deposition of further epitaxial layers. Epitaxy denotes the formation of an essentially single crystalline layer on an essentially single crystalline substrate in which the layer and the substrate have specific mutual orientations due to their interaction at the interface


Moreover, the different crystal wafers and therefore their surfaces have different crystal structures, especially when wafers comprising compounds of two or more elements are used. When they are cut at an angle with respect to one of the surfaces of the crystal structure then the elements exposed at its surface can consist predominantly of one of the elemental species contained in the bulk structure of the crystal, depending on the conditions during the final polishing step, there can be a predominance of one species over the other, leading to what is often called the termination of the surface.


With a crystal consisting of several elements, its surface can therefore be terminated with one of its consituent species or sub-unit-cell molecular blocks such as SrO and TiO2. This is a rather general classification, however, since within one termination (surplus of one element at the surface), usually several surface reconstructions are possible, depending on the chemical surroundings of the surface and its temperature.


Furthermore, within a single surface reconstruction, the surface structure usually adopts a pattern with so-called supercells, in which the surface reconstruction adopts two-dimensional periodic structures with unit cells spanning several of the underlying bulk unit cells. These surface unit cells can arrange in different relative orientations with respect to the underlying bulk crystal structure which are energetically equivalent and therefore, on average, are present in equal amounts on the surface. For example, the (0001)-oriented surface of sapphire (Al2O3) may reconstruct in the √31×√31 R±9° reconstruction, in which both the +9° and the −9° rotation of the unit cell with respect to the underlying crystal structure occur.


The surface reconstruction is the energetic landscape on which newly arriving atoms find their minimum energy positions at the onset of the deposition of an epitaxial layer. It therefore affects the orientation and crystalline perfection of the growing layer on the epitaxial template. A surface structure with the least possible amounts of defects in terms of the number of terrace steps, the termination, the surface reconstruction and the orientational domains of the surface reconstruction, therefore leads to the best possible epitaxial layers grown on this surface. It is therefore desirable to prepare the crystal prior to the deposition of layers in a state in which its surface has the smallest possible areal density of surface steps, is covered by a single termination, and within the single termination with a single surface reconstruction, and within the surface reconstruction with only one of the possible energetically equivalent orientations.


On the proceeding miniaturization of electronic devices towards quantum components, such as qubits which require an extremely low density of structural defects both within the deposited layer as at its interfaces to the layers above and below, these defects restrict or prevent a use of such electronic components as qubits or other functional devices based on quantum effects.


For this reason it is an object of the present invention to make available a method of preparing a surface of a single crystal wafer as an epitaxial template, where the epitaxial template is as defect free as possible, and in particular where the epitaxial template has only one of several possible nominally energetically equivalent orientations of the surface reconstruction. It is yet a further object to make available an epitaxial template respectively a device comprising such an epitaxial template with only one of several possible nominally energetically equivalent orientations of the surface reconstruction. It is yet a further object of the invention to make available a method that is as cost effective as possible and that allows a mass production of electronic components on such wafers.


These objects are satisfied by the subject matters defined in the respective independent claims.


Preferred embodiments of the invention are defined in the dependent claims, described in the following description and shown in the attached drawings.


Such a method is a method of preparing a surface of a single crystal wafer as an epitaxial template, the surface comprising surface atoms and/or surface molecules, the single crystal wafer comprising a single crystal composed of two or more elements and/or two or more molecules as substrate constituents, each element and molecule respectively having a sublimation rate, the method comprising the steps of:

    • providing a single crystal wafer substrate with a defined miscut having an absolute value of the miscut angle and an in-plane direction of the miscut angle;
    • heating the substrate to a temperature at which the surface atoms and/or the surface molecules can reconstruct and/or migrate along the surface to form an arrangement with a minimal step density and step edges oriented according to the predefined miscut angle and miscut direction;
    • heating the substrate to a temperature at which atoms or molecules of the substrate constituent having the highest sublimation rate may leave the surface;
    • optionally providing a flux of atoms or molecules of the same species impinging on the surface such that an equilibrium between sublimation and re-sublimation rate may be controllably established by varying the density of the flux.


In this context it should be noted that the migration may take place at a temperature different from a temperature at which the reconstruction of the surface takes place and hence a heating of the substrate surface may take place in more than one step.


In this connection it should further be noted that the temperature at which the surface atoms and/or the surface molecules can reconstruct and/or migrate along the surface is lower than a temperature at which atoms or molecules of the substrate constituent having the highest sublimation rate may leave the surface.


In this connection it should further be noted that a temperature difference between a temperature at which the surface atoms and/or the surface molecules can reconstruct and/or migrate along the surface and a temperature at which atoms or molecules of the substrate constituent having the highest sublimation rate may leave the surface is greater than 50° C., preferably greater than 100° C., more preferably greater than 150° and less than 600° C.


In this connection it should be noted that the miscut angle is the angle at which a single crystal is cut from a bulk substrate. It should further be noted that the direction is the direction relative to the bulk substrate in which the cut is carried out. Depending on this miscut angle, the pre-prepared surface will have terrace widths and terrace orientations that depend on the direction of the cut.


For a precise definition, a polar coordinate system is attached to the crystal plane with respect to which the miscut is to be defined, with the polar direction normal to the crystal plane and the azimuthal direction along one of the axes of the crystal structure. The orientation of the miscut is then defined by the polar and azimuthal angles of the normal to the miscut plane in this coordinate system. The polar angle defines the absolute value of the miscut angle. The azimuthal angle defines the direction of the miscut.


It is difficult to achieve an accuracy of the cutting angle of less than 0.01° F.rom the crystal plane of the crystal (‘miscut’). Typical absolute values of this angle range from 0.1 to 0.01°.


In the best case, the minimum distance between steps from crystal terrace to crystal terrace is around 0.1 to several μm along the surface. Apart from the absolute value of the miscut, its orientation is important, and is the main ingredient in the present invention, since the direction in which the steps on the surface are oriented with respect to the periodic arrangement of the crystal they form on defines the symmetry breaking which allows us to choose between the different, energetically equivalent, in-plane surface reconstruction orientations.


It should be noted that the bulk volume of the crystal, i.e. the bulk substrate, from which the single crystal wafer is cut is essentially defect free, it is the process of cutting the single crystal wafer that introduces defects into the surface of the single crystal wafer. On cutting the single crystal wafer from the bulk substrate, it is currently technically impossible to cut the bulk substrate directly along a plane of the crystal structure of the bulk substrate, this means that no planar single crystal wafer is cut from the bulk substrate. The different crystal wafers have different crystal structures and when they are cut at an angle, i.e. miscut, with respect to one of the surfaces of the crystal structure, then the “free” elements, atoms or molecules present on the substrate surface, i.e. the substrate constituents that are not bound within a crystal lattice of the crystal structure will adopt a lowest energetic state relative to the remaining structure. This is typically the state in which the lowest binding energy within the remaining structure is adopted by the free element, the surface reconstruction.


As is e.g. the case with Sapphire, the hexagonal crystal structure allows the “free” elements to adopt one of two orientations of the surface reconstruction and in a single crystal wafer this has the effect that each wafer has an equal amount of domains of the two surface reconstruction orientations on its surface.


On applying the step of heating in the UHV atmosphere, one can manipulate the orientation of the surface reconstruction by directing them in the desired direction, so that essentially all surface reconstruction unit cells are subsequently directed in only one of the two orientations forming a hitherto not possible single crystal wafer with a single orientation of the free elements at the surface.


In this connection it should be noted that the sublimation rate is the rate at which surface atoms and/or surface molecules evaporate, i.e. desorb or volatilize from the surface of the single crystal wafer, i.e. the rate (atoms or molecules per second) that leave the surface per unit area (cm2) at a given temperature. The reverse of this process is the adsorption of atoms or molecules from an impinging atomic or molecular flux, again in atoms or molecules per unit time (seconds) and per unit area (cm2).


The essence of the invention is that the symmetry breaking due to the in-plane step orientation forces the surface to form only one of the different in-plane orientations of the surface reconstruction.


Crystalline layers that inherit the crystal orientation of the substrate (epitaxial layers) may grow in different in-plane orientations if the surface has different orientations of the surface reconstruction. This leads to defects in the epitaxial layers. The invention avoids this problem by providing only one single orientation of the surface reconstruction. This is achieved by heating the substrate to a temperature at which atoms or molecules of the substrate become mobile enough along the surface to form a terrace system with the average width defined by the absolute value of the miscut angle. The substrate is further heated such that its constituent having the highest sublimation rate may leave the surface, leading to the formation of a single termination and surface reconstruction. This may be reversibly controlled by in addition supplying a flux of the constituent with the highest sublimation rate. Under these conditions, the symmetry breaking induced by the in-plane orientation of the step edges defined by the in-plane orientation of the miscut angle forces the choice of only one of possibly several in-plane orientations of the surface reconstruction selected by the procedure.


Hence, one of several energetically equivalent in-plane surface reconstruction unit cells may be selected by defining the miscut direction on conducting the method disclosed herein.


The miscut can be specified upon ordering the substrates, usually up to 0.01 degrees. Since the cutting accuracy is usually worse, and also fluctuates even when cutting several wafers from the same piece, what many suppliers do is to select the wafers after the cutting and polishing process, since the miscut can be measured with a much higher precision than with which it can be manufactured. For the customer, this may be unknown. As a customer, one may order a specific miscut, and one will receive it with a given tolerance value.


The invention describes a method to prepare a single domain reconstructed surface on a single crystal composed of two or more elements or formula units. This is achieved in two steps. Firstly, the crystal is heated while adjusting the surrounding pressure of the most volatile element or molecule, i.e. the substrate constituent having the highest sublimation rate, the surface is in equilibrium with. The combination of annealing temperature and elemental or molecular overpressure forces the crystal to expose only surfaces with a specific surface chemistry and therefore terrace steps that are larger fractions or integer multiples of the underlying bulk crystal periodicity perpendicular to the surface. Secondly, the single surface orientation is imposed by a miscut of the crystal surface close to a low-energy crystal face to induce a symmetry breaking that enforces the dominance of one in-plane orientation of this structure, allowing the preparation of a surface with a single surface reconstruction orientation. Such a template may be used for the epitaxial growth of subsequent layers without the common domain structure of energetically equivalent, but structurally mismatching domains.


Thus, on use of the method described herein, single crystal wafers with an epitaxial template as a surface are formed. This enables the provision of single crystal wafers also for the production of miniature electronic circuits that can be used e.g. in a quantum computer.


As is also the case on using the method according to the present invention, if one anneals the surface in an ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) by sublimation of the atoms on the surface of the single crystal wafer, then the amount of defects due to foreign atoms on the surface of the single crystal wafer can be reduced by at least an order of magnitude in comparison to treating single crystal wafers in a reaction atmosphere where the single crystal wafer is not heated to the temperatures in the range of the sublimation rate of foreign atoms on the surface which are not contained in the composition of the bulk crystal.


In this connection it should be noted that a cleaning step may be carried out before heating the single crystal wafer. This can reduce impurities, such as hydrocarbons (grease), that may be present on the surfaces of the single crystal wafers following their cutting and subsequent polishing. This cleaning step may include the use of solvents, and/or the introduction of the single crystal wafers into a vacuum system for degasing.


The sublimation rates of the two or more elements and/or two or more molecules, i.e. of the substrate constituents, at a given temperature may differ from one another. In this way one can tailor the underlying crystal structure in such a way that a single crystal wafer can be selected that is tailored to the thin film that is intended to be grown thereon. It has namely been found that if a single crystal wafer is used as a substrate which is the same as or deviates from the thin film in one or more of the following aspects, preferably in all of the following aspects, by less than 10%: lattice symmetry, lattice parameter, surface reconstruction, and surface termination.


If the thin film grown on the single crystal wafer is as similar as possible to the underlying substrate then the thin film can be grown as defect free as possible.


In order to match the two layers one to another, it may be required to grow a buffer layer, before applying the desired thin film on the single crystal wafer.


A sublimation temperature of the two or more elements and/or two or more molecules may differ by at least 2° C. Such temperature differences can easily be adjusted by selection of the substrate temperature.


The step of heating the single crystal wafer comprises at least two heating components: a first component of heating the single crystal wafer at a surface disposed remote from the surface to be treated, i.e. from the backside of the wafer.


This backside heating of the wafer is typically carried out using a laser, such as an infrared laser, also known as a substrate heating laser.


The single crystal wafer may be prepared to have a rough surface on its backside to help absorb the laser radiation. It is irradiated on this backside with a laser to be heated to high temperatures, usually well above 1000° C. Many substrate crystals which are transparent at visible wavelengths absorb well at long infrared wavelengths, therefore a CO2 laser at around 10 μm may be used. The temperature is controlled with a pyrometer aimed at the back side of the wafer.


The back side of the substrate is roughened either by not performing any further grinding or polishing steps after cutting it from the bulk crystal, by coarse grinding or other procedures that produce surface roughness with locally large deviations from the average surface, on a length scale at or above the wavelength of the heating laser.


The second component of heating may be provided by irradiating the surface to be treated with electromagnetic radiation from the side on which the subsequent layers may be deposited. This radiation may be another external radiation, or radiation generated by the heating of source materials.


The second component of heating may be provided to a source to irradiate the surface to be treated with a flux of the most volatile constituent of the surface material, in particular with the flux being selected lower than the sublimation rate of the same element from the surface at the chosen substrate temperature.


An intensity of flux may be selected to provide an equilibrium between the number of atoms or molecules reaching the substrate surface and the number of atoms or molecules leaving the surface. In this way the flux provides a pressure at the surface of the substrate which counteracts a pressure created by the atoms or molecules leaving the substrate in order to prevent further voids from occurring in the surface of the substrate or in some instances to also fill voids in the substrate surface.


Irradiating the surface with a continuous flux of the same species allows one to obtain a defined flux equilibrium between atoms leaving the surface and reaching the surface (the chemical potential). This step usually leads to an equilibrium surface reconstruction which may have energetically different in-plane orientations. The preparation and selection between different possible surface reconstructions depending on chemical potential in this way is reversible, since by reducing or increasing the flux of the volatile component, the chemical potential of the surface atoms/molecules may be shifted in both directions. Without irradiating the surface with a continuous flux of the same species, the sublimation of the volatile species from the surface at elevated substrate temperature only allows a sequential preparation of surface reconstructions in the direction towards a surface depletion of the volatile component.


Volatility represents the number of atoms that evaporate from a surface per unit time (sublimation rate) and only works in one direction, if the single crystal wafer is subjected to a vacuum atmosphere, i.e. if the process is carried out in vacuum, then the substrate constituents leaving the surface may eventually lead to further unwanted defects and hence to compensate this loss, a flux of material can be provided to impinge atoms back on surface.


The flux introduces a pressure on the surface which so to say prevents elements of the lattice structure of the single crystal wafer from leaving the lattice structure and indeed can also be used to reintroduce substrate constituents into “free” lattice spacings by adsorption, surface migration and incorporation.


Thus, the heating step can take place in two stages. The first stage is carried out to align the atoms of the structure and the second step is to cause atoms to not leave the substrate and thereby define a specific concentration of the volatile element with different surface reconstructions.


Optionally wherein the sublimation temperature is a temperature greater than 950° C. Such temperatures can ideally be distinguished and or set by use of a corresponding laser. The sublimation flux (vapor pressure) increases exponentially with temperature. The temperature at which the sublimation rate reaches a substantial value useful for crystal growth, is well defined and usually corresponds to the sublimation of one atomic layer on the crystal surface in less than 100 s.


The two or more elements and/or two or more molecules of the crystal may be selected from the group of members consisting of: Si, C, Ge, As, Al, O, N, O, Mg, Nd, Ga, Ti, La, Sr, Ta and combinations of the foregoing, by way of example, the single crystal wafers can be made from one of the following compounds SiC, AlN, GaN, Al2O3, MgO, NdGaO3, LaAIO3, DyScO3, TbScO3, TiO2, (LaAlO3)0.3(Sr2TaAlO6)0.35 (LSAT), Ga2O3, and SrTiO3. Such compounds have been found to be particularly suitable for the formation of quantum components.


The step of heating may be carried out by one or more lasers providing one or more forms of electromagnetic radiation. Lasers can advantageously be used to heat substrates to a desired and defined temperature and are comparatively simple to use.


The step of heating may be carried out in a vacuum atmosphere selected in the range of 10−8 to 10−12 hPa. The number of defects in the surface of the single crystal wafer can be minimized through the use of such an atmosphere with minimum gas density, whatever the chamber is able to produce.


The step of cutting is carried out by mechanical cutting, e.g. using a saw blade or a wire optionally coated with a diamond layer. Especially the step of cutting the single crystal wafer from a bulk substrate may be carried out by cutting the single crystal wafer from the bulk substrate of the single crystal by cutting the surface in a cutting plane that is different from the plane of the crystal of the bulk substrate.


By cutting the bulk substrate in this way the shape and size of the surface terraces can be pre-defined and selected for the desired use of the single crystal wafer. For example, the single crystal wafer may be cut from the bulk substrate by cutting the surface in a cutting plane that is inclined with respect to the central axis of the bulk substrate by 0.01 to 0.1°, preferably by 0.03 to 0.08°, especially at 0.05° or at least substantially at 0.05°.


According to a further aspect of the present invention this also relates to a method of forming a device comprising the provision of a single crystal wafer treated by a method as defined herein and depositing a further layer on said surface. In this way as defect free devices as possible are made available, since the thin films forming these are grown on epitaxial templates that have less defects than conventional single crystal wafers used for this purpose.


The further layer may comprise a member selected from the group of members consisting of:

    • the same material as the substrate, a metal, such as, Al, Ti, Ta, Fe, Nb, Cu, Co, Ni, Si, Ge, oxides, nitrides, hydrides, fluorides, chlorides, bromides, iodides, phosphides, sulphides, selenides, mercury based compounds and combinations of the foregoing. In many cases, epitaxial layers of the same material than the substrate, called homoepitaxial layers, can be grown with lower defect density than the substrate itself. A buffer layer of the same material can therefore provide a better template than the bare substrate surface.


+


The further layer may be deposited as a single layer or as a multi-layer structure comprising one or more kinds of materials. In this way specific kinds of devices for specific kinds of applications can be formed.


The one or more further layers may be grown on the single crystal substrate by evaporation of the corresponding material towards the front side of the wafer, ideally by Thermal Laser Epitaxy. However, also other well-known growth methods can be employed, such as molecular beam epitaxy, pulsed laser deposition, sputtering, other kinds of physical or chemical vapor deposition, e.g. atomic layer deposition, metal-organic CVD.


The step of heating may be carried out in the same chamber as the step of depositing a further layer on said surface, and optionally in the same atmosphere, in this way the one or more layers can be directly grown in situ in the same reaction chamber as the single crystal wafer is prepared reducing the number of defects that may be introduced into the cleaned single crystal wafer if this is moved between reaction chambers.


According to a further aspect the present invention also relates to a device comprising a layer structure having an epitaxial template and one or more layers grown on said epitaxial template. Such a device can have a significantly reduced number of defects in comparison to prior art devices.


One of the one or more layers, preferably all of the one or more layers that can be grown on the substrate treated in the above mentioned way may have qubit relaxation times and qubit coherence times above 100 μs, preferably above 1000 μs, even more preferably above 10 ms. Such layers have very few and preferably no defects and enable the use of such devices as qubits.





The invention will be explained in detail in the following by means of embodiments and with reference to the drawing in which is shown:



FIG. 1 a reaction chamber for thermal laser epitaxy applications comprising a single vacuum chamber;



FIG. 2 a reaction chamber for thermal laser epitaxy applications comprising first and second vacuum chambers defining first and second reaction volumes;



FIG. 3 cross-section of a stepped surface of a complex single crystalline solid, black and white denote different atomic or molecular species;



FIG. 4 faulty epitaxy due to mismatch of step heights or surface chemistry of a surface of a substrate;



FIG. 5 epitaxy in registry with the step height corresponding to the bulk periodicity of the surface of a substrate;



FIG. 6 crystal surface with ‘white’ termination;



FIG. 7 crystal surface with ‘black’ termination;



FIG. 8 surface reconstruction shown schematically as a fractional additional coverage of ‘black’ material;



FIG. 9 two mirror symmetric unit cells of a surface reconstruction;



FIG. 10 terraced step system perfectly aligned with the underlying crystal structure;



FIG. 11 miscut directed slightly away from the cubic in-plane crystal axes (horizontal and vertical in the figure);



FIG. 12 miscut directed 45° away from the in-plane axes;



FIG. 13 using symmetry breaking by surface miscut to favor one of two possible surface unit cell orientations;



FIG. 14 basic steps of producing a solid-state component;



FIG. 15 additional step of adding a buffer layer;



FIG. 16 depositing a thin film with two material sources



FIG. 17 additional step of adding a cover layer



FIG. 18 a first example of a quantum device



FIG. 19 a second example of a quantum device



FIG. 20 RHEED pattern of the √31×√31 surface reconstruction of Al2O3 with a single orientation of the rotation with respect to the principal crystal axes of the substrate. The substrate was annealed for 200 s at 1700° C. in an O2 atmosphere of 1×10−6 hPa and rapidly cooled down to 20° C. in this atmosphere. Image taken at 20° C., with the RHEED beam aligned along one of the principal crystal axes of the substrate.



FIG. 21 RHEED pattern of the same sample as in FIG. 20, after rotating the substrate counterclockwise by 9°.



FIG. 22 RHEED pattern of the √31×√31 surface reconstruction of Al2O3 with both possible orientations of the rotation with respect to the principal crystal axes of the substrate. The substrate was annealed for 200 s at 1700° C. in an O2 atmosphere of 0.75×10−1 hPa and rapidly cooled down to 20° C. in this atmosphere. Image taken at 20° C., with the RHEED beam aligned along one of the principal crystal axes of the substrate.



FIG. 23 AFM micrograph of an Al2O3 surface after the surface preparation process of the present invention. The substrate was annealed for 200 s at 1700° C. in an O2 atmosphere of 1×10−6 hPa and rapidly cooled down to 20° C. in this atmosphere.



FIG. 24 Height profile extracted along the line in FIG. 22.



FIG. 25 AFM micrograph of a 50-nm-thick ( 1/40 of the length of the reference bar in the image) thin film of Ta grown on a Al2O3 substrate prepared by the method of the present invention. The substrate was annealed for 200 s at 1700° C. in an ultrahigh vacuum (pressure <10−10 hPa) prior to deposition. The Ta film was grown with a pressure <2×10−10 hPa at 1200° C. substrate temperature from a locally molten Ta metal source.



FIG. 26 SEM top-view micrograph of a 10-nm-thick thin film of Ta grown on a Al2O3 substrate prepared by the method of the present invention. The substrate was annealed for 200 s at 1700° C. in an ultrahigh vacuum (pressure <10−10 hPa) prior to deposition. The Ta film was grown with pressure <2×10−10 hPa at 1200° C. substrate temperature;



FIG. 27 XRD diffraction pattern of a 50-nm-thick thin film of Ta grown on a Al2O3 substrate prepared by the method of the present invention. The substrate was annealed for 200 s at 1700° C. in an ultrahigh vacuum (pressure <10−10 hPa) prior to deposition. The Ta film was grown with pressure <2×10−10 hPa at 1200° C. Only the α−Ta(110)/(220) equivalent planes of the Ta film are visible normal to the surface, together with the substrate peak, confirming a single out-of-plane orientation of the Ta film corresponding to a complete epitaxial alignment;



FIG. 28 Nb film grown on a Si template without epitaxial orientation at room temperature by TLE. The deposition time was 40 min. The layer thickness is 20 nm. The low substrate temperature and lack of a clean epitaxial template produce a disordered columnar film structure with a large number of defects.



FIG. 29 chamber pressure Pox measured during the laser evaporation of Ti, using a constant laser power and oxygen-ozone gas flow;



FIG. 30 grazing-incidence x-ray diffraction patterns of (a) Ti-, (b) Fe-, (c) Hf-, (d) V-, (e) Ni-, (f) Nb-oxide films grown by TLE on Si (100) substrates. The expected diffraction peak positions of each oxide are marked in each figures by gray lines;



FIG. 31 cross-sectional SEM images of several oxide films deposited by TLE. Each panel shows the value of Pox. Most films have a columnar structure.



FIG. 32 grazing-incidence x-ray diffraction patterns of TLE-deposited (a) Tioxide and (b) Ni-oxide films for several Pox values. As Pox increases, the Ti source produces TiO2 films in the rutile and anatase phases, whereas the Ni source forms partially oxidized Ni/NiO films. Gray lines and solid purple stars in (a) show the expected diffraction peak positions of TiO2 rutile and anatase phases, respectively. Gray lines in (b) show the expected peak positions of cubic NiO; and.



FIG. 33 deposition rates of (a) Ti (oxide) and (b) Ni (oxide) measured at several Pox. The deposition rate of Ti increases with increasing Pox, whereas for Ni an increase of Pox>10−3 hPa almost suppresses the evaporation process.






FIG. 1 shows a reaction chamber 10 for thermal laser epitaxy applications comprising a single vacuum chamber 12 defining a first reaction volume 14. The reaction chamber 10 can be sealed with respect to the ambient atmosphere, i.e. a laboratory, a factory, a clean room or the like. The vacuum chamber 12 can be pressurized to pressures ranging from between 101 and 10−12 hPa, for pure ideal conditions to pressures in the range of 10−8 to 10−12 hPa using suitable vacuum pumps 18 that extract the air from the vacuum chamber 12 as is schematically illustrated by the arrow pointing out of the vacuum chamber 12, as is known to the person skilled in the art.


If required, a process gas G can be introduced into the vacuum chamber 12 from a gas supply 20 along the arrow pointing into said vacuum chamber 12. The process gas G, also known as reaction gas can be selected from such gases such as oxygen, ozone, plasma-activated oxygen, nitrogen, plasma-activated nitrogen, hydrogen, F, Cl, Br, I, P, S, Se, and Hg, or compounds such as NH3, SF6, N2O, CH4. The pressure of the process gas G can be selected in the range of 10−8 hPa to ambient pressure, respectively for pure ideal conditions in the range of 10−8 hPa to 1 hPa.


The vacuum pump 18 optionally together with the gas supply 20 provides a respective reaction atmosphere in the reaction chamber 10, i.e. a vacuum optionally combined with a pre-defined gas atmosphere.


The reaction chamber comprises a substrate arrangement 22 at which a substrate 24 can be arranged. In practice it is possible to provide a plurality of substrate arrangements 22 and/or to arrange a plurality of substrates 24 on one or more substrate arrangements 22.


The substrate 24 that is used can typically be a single crystal wafer, with a material of the wafer typically being selected from the group of members consisting of: SiC, AlN, GaN, Al2O3, MgO, NdGaO3, DyScO3, TbScO3, TiO2, (LaAIO3)0.3(Sr2TaAlO6)0.35 (LSAT), Ga2O3, and SrTiO3. Such single crystal wafers are typically used in the production of solid state components, and are interesting candidates for the production of quantum components, such as qubits.


During coating and pre-treatment of the substrate 24, which can be present in the form of a single crystal wafer, the substrate 24 is heated using a substrate heating laser 26.


The substrate heating laser 26 is typically an infrared laser that operates with a wavelength in the infrared region, specifically with a wavelength selected in the range of ca. 1 to 20 μm, especially of around 8 to 12 μm. Such wavelengths can e.g. be made available via a CO2 laser 26.


The substrate heating laser 26 typically heats a substrate surface 48 of the substrate 24, i.e. a frontside of the substrate 24, via indirect heating via a backside 50 of the substrate 24. Thereby the substrate surface 48 can be heated to a temperature between 900° C. and 3000° C., in particular 1000° C. to 2000° C. Consequently, the intensity of the substrate heating laser 26 is varied to achieve the various desired temperatures in dependence on the sublimation rate respectively sublimation temperature of the substrate constituent having the highest sublimation rate.


Typically the intensity of the substrate heating laser 26 can be varied within the range of 4 W to 1 KW for substrate sizes of 5×5 mm2 or 10×10 mm2. To be able to reach the required preparation temperatures, 100 W are required for a 10×10 mm2 sapphire substrate to reach 2000° C., 500 W are required for a 10×10 mm2 SrTiO3 substrate to reach 1400° C. The required temperature varies significantly. According to Planck's radiation law, the emitted power per area depends on the emittance of the material, which is a material property, and upon temperature as T4, which means that the required power increases dramatically with temperature.


To cover the range of temperatures for the preparation of epitaxial templates according to the invention, we find a necessary maximum power density on the substrate of 1 kW/cm2, with significantly smaller values such as e.g. around 100 W/cm2 for sapphire at 2000° C.


Due to the dramatic T4 dependence on temperature, the substrate heating laser at the same time requires a high dynamic range with the ability to maintain stable low power levels for materials that require lower temperatures for substrate preparation, and in particular for the deposition of epitaxial layers on the substrate template at lower temperatures.


It should also be noted that the substrate 24 may be heated from the front, the side or in a different manner. Depending on the heating means, it should simply be ensured that the temperature of the substrate surface 48 can be heated to within a range of 900° C. to 3000° C., in order to be able to ensure that one of the substrate constituents, i.e. one of the elements forming the substrate, can be moved along the substrate surface 48 during the heating step and may desorb or sublimate from the substrate surface 48 for generation of a desired epitaxial template 60 (see e.g. FIGS. 5 to 7 hereinafter).


The temperature of the substrate surface 48 can be measured using a pyrometer or the like (not shown).


As indicated by the double headed arrow 28, the substrate arrangement 22 can be transferred into and out of the vacuum chamber 12 using a suitable apparatus (not shown).


In order to coat the substrate 24 with one or more layers of thin films 62 (see FIGS. 14 to 20 in the following), the reaction chamber 10 further comprises first and second source elements 30, 32 arranged at a source arrangement 34. These source elements 30, 32 can also be provided as distinct component sections of a single source element 30.


In this context it should be noted that a material of the respective source 30, 32 can be selected from any element of the periodic table, provided it is solid at the temperatures and pressures selected within the respective vacuum chamber 12 used for the deposition of the thin film 62.


In this connection it should be noted that preferred materials for the respective source 30, 32 are Sc, Ti, V, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, Zr, Nb, Mo, Ru, Hf, Al, Mg, Ca, Sr, Ba, Y, Rh, Ta, W, Re, Ir, Ga, In, Si, Ge, Sn, Eu, Ce, Pd, Ag, Pt, and Au, if the above elements are deposited in an oxygen/ozone mixture as a reaction atmosphere with approximately 10% to deposit binary oxides as thin films 62. In order to deposit single crystal thin films 62, a vacuum atmosphere is typically used.


First and second source heating lasers 36, 38 that are respectively directed at the first and second source elements 30, 32 are also provided. The first and second source heating lasers 36, 38 make available different evaporation and/or sublimation temperatures at the first and second source elements 30, 32.


The first and second source heating lasers 36, 38 typically make available laser light at the first and second source elements 30, 32 with a wavelength selected between 280 nm and 20 μm. For metallic sources, it is preferred if the source heating lasers 36 and 38 make available light in the wavelength range selected between 350 nm and 800 nm due to the increasing absorptivity of metals at shorter wavelengths. Although high-power lasers with short wavelengths below 515 nm are not yet commercially viable, the highest absorptivities according to low-power measurements can be expected at 300 nm. Should lasers with this wavelength become available, the preferred wavelength for the source heating lasers would be 300 nm +20 nm.


In this context it should further be noted that the lasers 26, 36, 38 can be operated in pulsed modes, but are preferably used as continuous sources of radiation. A continuous laser 26, 36, 38 introduces less energy per unit time than a pulsed source which could lead to a damaged source 30, 32


In order to sublimate and/or evaporate elements from the first and second source elements 30, 32 to ensure that these arrive at the substrate surface 48 for coating of the substrate 24, a suitable intensity of the first and second source heating lasers 36, 38 has to be selected. This intensity depends on the distance of the first and second source elements 30, 32 from the substrate surface 48. For a given flux density at the substrate surface, the intensity increases and/or decreases as the first and second source elements 30, 32 are moved away from and/or towards the substrate surface 48.


In the present examples, the substrate surface 48 is placed 60 mm away from the respective first and second source elements 30, 32. The intensity of the laser is correlated approximately to the square of the distance between the first and second source elements 30, 32 and the substrate surface 48. Hence for an increase of a factor two in the distance between the first and second source elements 30, 32 and the substrate surface 48, the intensity of the laser has to be increased by approximately a factor of four.


Hence, the intensities specified in the following are for a distance of 60 mm between the first and second source elements 30, 32 and the substrate surface 48. If a larger distance is selected then the intensity of the respective first and second source heating lasers 36, 38 has to be increased and vice versa, if the distance is reduced.


Generally speaking the substrate heating laser 26, the first and second source heating lasers 36, 38 make available laser light, in particular laser light with a wavelength between 10 nm to 100 μm, preferably with a wavelength selected in the visual or infrared range, especially with a wavelength between 280 nm and 1.2 μm. These lasers 26, 36, 38 make available first electromagnetic radiation and/or second electromagnetic radiation and/or third electromagnetic radiation, and/or further types of electromagnetic radiation.


The first and second source heating lasers 36, 38 are provided to evaporate and/or sublimate first and second materials from the first and second source elements 30, 32 by heating the first and second source elements 30, 32 to a temperature below the plasma threshold of the first material and/or of the second material.


A shielding aperture 40 is schematically illustrated in the vacuum chamber 12 that functions as a shield to prevent the sublimated and/or evaporated source material to deposit on an entrance window 52 of the chamber. If such a layer of material is deposited on the window 52, then the intensity of the respective laser 26, 36, 38 has to be adapted over time to compensate for this material absorbed on the window.


Moreover, the shielding aperture 40 can also act as a shield to prevent reflected laser light of one of the lasers 26, 36, 38 from being focused back into one of the lasers 26, 36, 38 which could destroy the respective laser 26, 36, 38.


The shielding aperture 40 can also form a part of a beam shaping system of one or more of the respective lasers 26, 36, 38 and can hence be used as a coupling means for coupling the respective electromagnetic radiation from the first and second source heating lasers 36, 38 into the reaction chamber 10 and onto the first and second source elements 30, 32.


Generally speaking a respective window 52 is arranged between each one of the lasers 26, 36, 38 and the reaction chamber 10 in order to couple the respective laser light into the reaction chamber 10 as further coupling means.


This means that the coupling means can comprise any kind of optical element or laser light beam shaping element that can be used to couple the light from one of the lasers 26, 36, 38 into the reaction chamber, i.e. on to the substrate 24 respectively onto one or more of the first and second source elements 30, 32 for its intended use.


It should be noted in this context that the reaction chamber 10 may also only comprise a single source element 30, or more than two source elements 30, 32, with the further source elements either making available further materials of the same or different kind that can be deposited onto one or more substrates 24 in the reaction chamber 10.


In this context it should be noted that if two or more source elements 30, 32 are made available in the vacuum chamber 12 that laser light from one of the first and second source heating lasers 36, 38 can be directed at one source element 30, 32 for the sublimation and/or evaporation of a thin film 62 comprising the material of the respective source element 30, 32, but not of the other source element 32, 30.


This process can be repeated for each source element provided in the vacuum chamber 12 in order to form multiple different layers and multi-layer and alloy or composite structures on the substrate 24.


Similarly both source elements 30, 32, and if provided, further source elements can have laser light from one of the first and second source heating lasers 36, 38, and if provided from a third source heating laser directed thereat in order to simultaneously sublimate and/or evaporate source material from a plurality of source elements 30, 32 in order to deposit a thin film 62 on the surface 48 of the substrate 24 for the deposition of a compound on the surface 48 of the substrate 24.


Hence the material of the thin film 62 or layer deposited on the substrate 24 is a reaction product of the evaporated and/or sublimated material and a component of the reaction atmosphere, i.e. if provided a compound reacted with the process gas G or a single material thin film 62 if the sublimation and/or evaporation is carried out in vacuum.


Regardless of how many source elements 30, 32 are provided in the vacuum chamber 12 and impinged with laser light at any one given time, a process gas may be introduced into the vacuum chamber and bring about a reaction of the evaporated and/or sublimated source material with the process gas, in order to generate thin films formed of compounds of the source material and of the process gas, such as oxides, as will also be discussed in the following.


It should further be noted that a material of the first and/or second source elements 30, 32 that is used for the evaporation and/or sublimation can be self-supporting and can thereby be provided crucible free, e.g. a Ta source element 30, 32 can be provided that has no crucible associated therewith.



FIG. 2 shows a second kind of reaction chamber 10 comprising two vacuum chambers 12 defining first and second reaction volumes 14, 16. The first and second reaction volumes are separated from one another via a gate valve 44.


Such reaction chambers 10 may be beneficially selected in the formation of multilayered films (see FIGS. 14 to 19) where the films need to be formed in different reaction atmospheres, or if the substrates 24 are coated with different films in batches in different reaction chambers as part of a production line.


In this way the reaction chamber 10 comprises at least two separated reaction volumes 14, 16, whereby the at least two reaction volumes 14, 16 are sealable against each other, e.g. via the gate valve 44 and whereby the substrate arrangement can be moved between the at least two reaction volumes 14, 16 within the reaction chamber 10 continuously sealed with respect to the ambient atmosphere.


In this context it should be noted that the first reaction atmosphere and the second reaction atmosphere and, if provided, the third or further reaction atmospheres may be identical.


Alternatively, the first reaction atmosphere and the second reaction atmosphere and/or the third reaction atmosphere are different and are exchanged between different reaction volumes 14, 16 or within the first volume 14 and/or reaction volume 16, and/or the second reaction atmosphere and the third reaction atmosphere are different and are exchanged between different reaction volumes 14, 16 or within the first volume 14 and/or reaction volume 16.


In this context it should further be noted that the first reaction atmosphere and/or the second reaction atmosphere and/or the third or further reaction atmospheres are at least partly ionized or excited, in particular ionized by plasma ionization and/or excitation. Excitation describes the transition of one or more electrons within an atom or molecule to energetically higher levels. The relaxation from such higher levels may provide additional energy to enable or improve the chemical reaction between the evaporated atoms or molecules and the activated or ionized reaction gas.


Also for the preparation of the substrate surface 48, for the deposition of the one or more thin films, and for the terminal tempering and/or cooling, respectively, different reaction atmospheres might be suitable. Hence, the availability of different reaction volumes 14, 16 can be of further advantage.


In this context it should be noted that if a solid-state device, in particular a quantum device, preferably for a qubit, comprising one or more thin films 62 should be produced, with the one or more thin films 62 comprising a first material and each said film 62 having a thickness selected between a monolayer and 100 nm and being deposited onto a front surface of a substrate, then the production process can be carried out in a reaction chamber 10 as shown in FIG. 1 or in FIG. 2. The reaction chamber 10 is then sealed with respect to the ambient atmosphere in order to generate the controlled vacuum, optionally together with the gas reaction atmosphere made available with the process gas G.


Such a method comprises the steps of:

    • a) Preparing the front surface 48 of the substrate 24 by heating the substrate 24 with a first electromagnetic radiation coupled into the reaction chamber 10 while the reaction chamber 10 contains a first reaction atmosphere, e.g. vacuum, possibly in combination with a process gas 20 such as oxygen, in this context the first electromagnetic radiation is made available by the substrate heating laser 26,
    • b) Evaporating and/or sublimating of the first material by heating a source element 30, 32 comprising the first material by a second electromagnetic radiation coupled into the reaction chamber 10, e.g. using one of the first and second source heating lasers 36, 38 while the reaction chamber 10 contains a second reaction atmosphere, e.g. a vacuum or a partial vacuum and predefined gas atmosphere, for depositing the thin film 62 comprising the first material and/or a compound of the first material onto the front surface 48 prepared in step a), and optionally
    • c) Illuminating the one or more thin films 62 and/or the substrate 24 with a third electromagnetic radiation coupled into the reaction chamber 10 while the reaction chamber contains a third reaction atmosphere, for forming the solid-state device and for tempering and/or controlled cooling of the solid-state device, whereby during the steps a) to c) the reaction chamber stays sealed with respect to the ambient atmosphere and both the substrate and the subsequent solid-state device, respectively, continuously stay in the reaction chamber 10.


In this context it should be noted that a possible method of preparing the front surface 48 of the substrate 24 can be made available in accordance with the following teaching. It should however, be noted that for less pure layer structures on the substrate 24 also conventional cleaning and purification steps can be carried out.


A specific method of preparing a surface 48 of a single crystal wafer 24 as an epitaxial template 60, the surface 48 comprising surface atoms and/or surface molecules, the single crystal wafer 24 comprising a single crystal composed of two or more elements and/or two or more molecules as substrate constituents, each element and molecule respectively having a sublimation rate, the method comprising the steps of:

    • providing the single crystal wafer substrate 24 with a defined miscut angle and direction;
    • heating the substrate 24 to a temperature at which the surface atoms and/or the surface molecules can migrate along the surface 48 to form an arrangement with a minimal step density and step edges oriented according to the predefined miscut angle and miscut direction;
    • heating the substrate 24 to a temperature at which atoms or molecules of the substrate constituent having the highest sublimation rate may leave the surface (sublimate, desorb).


Optionally, the surface 48 of the substrate 24 can be irradiated with a continuous flux of the same species to obtain a defined flux equilibrium between atoms or molecules leaving the surface and reaching the surface (chemical potential). This step usually leads to a surface reconstruction which may have energetically equivalent in-plane orientations.


Thereby one can cause a symmetry breaking of the atoms and/or molecules present at the substrate surface 48 due to the step orientation which forces the surface 48 to form only one of the different in-plane orientations.


Crystalline layers that have an orientation uniquely defined with respect to the crystal orientation of the substrate 24 (epitaxial layers) may grow in different inplane orientations if the surface has different orientations of the surface reconstruction. This leads to defects in the epitaxial layers. This is avoided if using the method of preparing the substrate as disclosed herein by providing only one single orientation of a surface 24 reconstructed using this method.


In this context it should be noted that the sublimation rates of the two or more elements and/or two or more molecules at a given temperature usually differ from one another.


The step of heating the single crystal wafer 24 comprises two heating components: a first component of heating the single crystal wafer 24 at a surface disposed remote from the surface 48 to be treated and a second component of heating is provided by irradiating the surface 48 to be treated with thermal black-body radiation generated by the hot evaporation sources 32, 34.


The flux introduces a pressure on the surface 48 which competes with the desorption flux from the surface, thereby establishing an equilibrium which defines the chemical potential of the flux species at the surface.


Heating the substrate surface and irradiating it with a balancing flux of the volatile component causes several processes to become active.


The first one is the definition of a specific termination (‘black’ or ‘white’, schematically), referring to FIGS. 6 and 7 with respect to FIG. 3, which defines the repetition period of the surface structure and therefore the step height normal to the crystal plane closest to the miscut plane.


The second one is the mobilization of atoms along the surface such that the lowest energy surface in terms of the step structure is adopted, which is the lowest number of steps given by the step height of the first step and the miscut angle.


The third one is the formation of a specific surface reconstruction determined mainly by the substrate temperature and the chemical potential of the volatile flux as controlled by setting the volatile flux.


The fourth one is the selection between different energetically equivalent orientations of the surface unit cell by the choice of miscut direction as shown schematically in FIG. 13.


The flux of material, e.g. oxygen for a sapphire substrate 24 fills defects in the surface 48 and aids in providing a surplus of atoms to obtain an equilibrium between atoms leaving and adding atoms to the surface 48. This can be varied by adapting the pressure exerted by the flux, i.e. the amount of oxygen impinged onto the substrate.


By way of example it should be noted that the sublimation temperature is typically a temperature greater than 950° C., around 1700° C. for sapphire and around 1300° C. for SrTiO3.


The two or more elements and/or two or more molecules of the crystal forming the single crystal wafer 24 can be selected from the group of members consisting of: Si, C, Ge, As, Al, O, N, O, Mg, Nd, Ga, Ti, La, Sr, Ta and combinations of the foregoing, by way of example, the single crystal wafers 24 can be made from one of the following compounds SiC, AlN, GaN, Al2O3, MgO, NdGaO3, TiO2, (LaAIO3)0.3(Sr2TaAlO6)0.35 (LSAT), Ga2O3, SrLaAIO4, Y:ZrO2 (YSZ) and SrTiO3.


The step of heating is carried out by the substrate heating laser 26 optionally in combination with one of the first and second source heating lasers 36, 38 provided the respective source comprises a material of the single crystal wafer 24 that has the highest sublimation rate and that should be continuously supplied towards the substrate.


The step of heating during the preparation of the substrate 24 is typically carried out in a vacuum atmosphere selected in the range of 10−8 to 10−12 hPa if no equilibrium between the desorbing flux and a compensating stabilization flux is desired.


With a stabilizing flux, the step of heating during the preparation of the substrate 24 is typically carried out in a vacuum atmosphere selected in the range of 10−6 to 103 hPa.


Thereby an epitaxial template 60 can be formed as shown schematically e.g. in FIGS. 5 to 8 in the following.


Generally speaking the substrate 24 is selected such that the substrate matches the layer structure that is to be grown/deposited thereon. Generally speaking a substrate 24 is used which is the same as the thin film 62 grown thereon or deviates by at most 10% from the thin film 62 in one or more of the following aspects, preferably in all of the following aspects: lattice symmetry, lattice parameter, surface reconstruction, and surface termination.


In order to facilitate this it may be necessary or beneficial to deposit a buffer layer on the surface 48 prior to depositing a thin film 62 thereon.


The invention describes a solution to the problem of providing an essentially single crystalline template for subsequent epitaxy or other applications in which a uniform atomic arrangement both normal to the surface 48 and in-plane is advantageous.



FIG. 3 shows a schematic cut through a crystal 24 consisting of at least two elements or formula units, oriented in such a way that the surface 48 cut through the crystal exposes an alternating arrangement of terraces 58 composed of the two or more elements or formula units. For the sake of clarity, FIG. 3 shows just two elements or formula units colored in black and white. For surface preparation, the crystal 24 is subjected to a high enough temperature such that atoms or molecules may leave the surface 48 or attach to it, and fluxes of both atoms or molecules corresponding to the formula units within the crystal 24 are available such that the crystal 24 and the fluxes are in equilibrium with each other. As can be seen from FIG. 3, the surface 24 usually exposes alternating terraces 58 with different surface composition, and a step height corresponding to the smallest stable step size (formula unit) within the crystal 24.



FIG. 4 shows an epitaxial layer 60 respectively a thin film 62 deposited on the surface 48 of the substrate 24 of FIG. 3 and faulty epitaxy due to a mismatch of step heights or surface chemistry.


For the typical case shown, the step height of the terrace 58 structure does not match the lattice constant of the epitaxial layer 60. This causes the formation of stacking offsets at step edges 66, where the unit cells of the epitaxial layer 60 become shifted with respect to each other. For clarity, in FIG. 4 this shift is only due to the step height. It may also be caused by the alternating surface chemistry (‘white’ vs. ‘black’) on subsequent terraces, leading to a different interface structure between substrate and epitaxial layer on both terraces. Usually, such a chemical mismatch also produces a geometrical offset in the interface, with additional other detrimental effects such as e.g. local charges and structural defects. Instead, we would like to achieve the interface structure shown in FIG. 5, in which the lattice constants of the epitaxial layer 62, i.e. the thin film 62, and the substrate 24 match, and the epitaxial layer 62, i.e. the thin film 62 always grows on one and the same exposed surface layer everywhere. In addition, this match shall not only apply to the direction normal to the interface, but the surface 48 shall also expose a single in-plane orientation of the crystal structure, avoiding the formation of different domains rotated around the surface normal, or mirrored at a plane not parallel to the surface or the exposed terraces.


Using the method of preparation described herein allows to prepare a surface 48 as an epitaxial template 60 that offers both a uniform surface chemistry on all terrace 58 surfaces and a single in-plane orientation of the (usually reconstructed) surface atomic arrangement. The situation shown in FIG. 3 is somewhat idealized in that for most crystalline solids the vapor pressure of its constituents, either elemental or molecular, often differs strongly. Therefore, especially without any flux of atoms or molecules impinging on the surface 48 during the preparation of the substrate 24, one species will preferentially leave the surface 48 if the substrate 24 is heated to a sufficiently high temperature.


The situations shown in FIGS. 6 and 7 therefore occur so selectively that usually only one of the situations can be realized in practice. Nevertheless, the two figures show the two extremes that are in principle possible for surface preparation: depending on the relative overpressure of one constituent over the other in the impinging gas phase, the surface 48 can be prepared in a state such that one type of terrace, either the ‘white’ one (FIG. 6) or the ‘black’ one (FIG. 7), grows at the expense of the other type, ultimately covering the entire surface.


In practice, a complete coverage can only be achieved with the less volatile element or formula unit covering the surface 48, since such chemical equilibria typically require many orders of magnitude of pressure difference between the different constituents to reach a nearly complete dominance of one element or formula unit. Notably, also the intrinsic volatility difference between the two usually amounts by itself to several orders of magnitude.


The method of preparation therefore consists of heating the substrate crystal 24 to a temperature at which at least the most volatile constituent of the crystal sublimates from the surface 48. It may be necessary to even irradiate the surface 48 with a flux of the volatile species at higher temperatures to avoid the decomposition of the crystal 24 into different, unwanted compounds. Using a sufficiently high temperature such that

    • the surface 48 can exchange atoms of at least the volatile species with its surroundings, and
    • the mobility of atoms along the surface 48 is high enough to form highly ordered, minimum energy terraces,


allows the desired double-step surface structure with uniform surface chemistry to form.


In practice, the surface 48 does not switch between bulk-terminated surface layers, but instead forms surface reconstructions, in which the surface atoms rearrange into positions different from the bulk, often even with different stoichiometries, such that the surface energy is minimized. This is illustrated in FIG. 8, where such a surface reconstruction containing additional ‘black’ material is indicated by a thicker black layer.


Depending on the pressures of the impinging species and the surface temperature, often different surface reconstructions are possible for a given termination, e.g. on sapphire, where there are at least two different Al-rich surface reconstructions.


A surface reconstruction usually involves the formation of a surface supercell spanning several unit cells of the underlying bulk crystal. An arbitrary illustrative example is shown in FIG. 7 for a surface unit cell which covers two bulk unit cells and has two equivalent, mirror symmetric surface unit cells. For both cases, two surface unit cells are shown; in practice the surface unit cells periodically repeat along the surface 48 in both directions and cover the entire terrace 58. In the example, both orientations of the surface unit cell have the same energy, and therefore nucleate with equal probability independently of each other such that across large areas, on average half the surface 48 is covered with each orientation.


This is an undesired configuration, since it leads to faulty boundaries where the domains meet. When used as a template for epitaxial growth, such different surface reconstruction domains may also cause different orientations of the epitaxial film 62 grown on top of it, thereby transferring the in-plane surface reconstruction domain boundaries into the epitaxial film 62 as three-dimensional planar domain boundaries between crystallites of different orientation. This problem may be solved by breaking the symmetry of the surface 48, and thereby favoring one surface unit cell orientation over the other by making them energetically inequivalent.



FIG. 9 shows two mirror symmetric unit cells of a surface reconstruction. This is the case e.g. with a Sapphire single crystal wafer 24, where the miscut produces a surface with two different orientations which can lead to the situation shown in FIG. 4.


The proposed way to achieve this according to the invention is the orientation and slope of the surface miscut. When cutting the substrate discs (‘wafers’ 24) from the bulk single crystal, the cutting plane may be directed slightly away from the crystal plane. Depending on this viscinal miscut angle, the prepared surface 48 will have terrace widths and terrace orientations that depend on the direction of the cut and can therefore be controlled at will. Looking at one possible example of a cubic inplane crystal structure, three different resulting terrace structures are shown schematically in FIGS. 11-13.



FIG. 10 shows a terraced step system 58 of a substrate surface 48 perfectly aligned with the underlying crystal structure. In the illustrative example, this step orientation does not favor one of the two possible in-plane orientations of the surface unit cell of FIG. 9, as both make the same angle with the surface steps.



FIG. 11 shows an in-plane orientation slightly away from the in-plane crystal axis in the vertical direction. The edges of the big square indicate the faces of the bulk cubic crystal. Finally, FIG. 12 shows a terrace train oriented at 45° from the inplane axes.


This miscut, just as any other way of breaking the symmetry of the system, may now be used to favour one of the two different surface unit cells as indicated in FIG. 13. In this schematic representation, the in-plane terrace system is prepared with a step orientation parallel to one of the equivalent surface reconstruction unit cells, which in this example favors the alignment of the surface reconstruction unit cell with the step edges, the top orientation, and suppressing the bottom, crossed-out orientation.


While the in-plane orientation of the step edges, corresponding to the azimuthal component of the miscut angle, selects one surface unit cell orientation over the other, the absolute value of the miscut angle, its polar component, is also important in stabilizing the single orientation structure. At high temperatures, entropy introduces statistical disorder into any system. In this case, as the in-plane surface unit cell orientation is established at an edge and then propagated from unit cell to unit cell, this may lead to faults with again oppositely oriented unit cells at certain average distances on each terrace. With a sufficiently high absolute value of the miscut angle, e.g. 0.05°, the stabilizing steps that imprint one orientation over the other occur at such short distance that this deviation, and thereby increase of defect density, can be avoided.



FIG. 14 depicts the three basic steps, denoted with A, B, and C, respectively, of the method for producing a solid-state component 100. The steps are carried out in a reaction chamber 10 (see FIG. 1). In particular, the reaction chamber 10 stays sealed against the ambient atmosphere for the whole production process. This allows to keep the advantages of each steps with respect to a lowering of the number of defects in the formed solid-state component 100, resulting in qubit relaxation times and qubit coherence times above 100 μs, preferably above 1000 μs, even more preferably above 10 ms.


In the first step a) of the method, shown on the left of FIG. 14 and denoted with “A”, the substrate 24 is prepared, e.g. as discussed herein or simply in a gas atmosphere as is known in the state of the art. A first reaction atmosphere 116 is filled into the reaction chamber 10. In particular, the substrate 24 is heated by a first electromagnetic radiation 104. This first electromagnetic radiation 104 is preferably provided by a substrate heating laser 26, see FIG. 1, 2. By heating the substrate, as shown preferably from a the backside 50 opposite to the substrate surface 48, annealing effects can be triggered.


In addition, the first reaction atmosphere 116 can be chosen such that also a composition of the substrate surface 48 is maintained, i.e. a suitable reaction or process gas G can be used, e.g. oxygen in the case of Al2O3 to avoid oxygen depletion and the formation of oxygen vacancies. Further, also a flux of termination material T can be directed onto the substrate surface 48. Preferably, the termination material T comprises, especially consists of, an element of the material of the substrate 24. By this, the termination material T can fill defects on the substrate surface 48 caused by missing atoms or molecules and/or can provide a pressure on the substrate surface 48, preventing atoms or molecules to evaporate from the substrate surface 48.


As an overall result, after step a) the substrate surface 48 is preferably free or at least depleted of defects with respect to the lattice structure of the substrate 24, whereas in addition also defects with respect to surface reconstruction and surface termination can be drastically reduced, preferably down to zero.


In the following step b), shown in the middle of FIG. 14 and denoted with “B”, one or more thin films 62 containing a first material 126 are deposited onto the substrate surface 48 previously prepared in step a). As mentioned above, the reaction chamber 10 stays sealed with respect to the ambient atmosphere between step a) and step b).


In this connection it should be noted that a thin film 62 as described herein is a layer of atoms or molecules of the same kind, or a formula unit as a closed film, having a thickness between a monolayer and 100 nm.


As shown in “B” of FIG. 14, the first material 126 is provided as first source 30, i.e. as source element, provided within the reaction chamber 10 by a source ar-rangement 34. The first source 30 is heated by a suitable second electromagnetic radiation 106, preferably provided by a first source heating laser 36 (see FIGS. 1, 2) for an evaporation and/or sublimation of the first material 126. By using the second electromagnetic radiation 106, no additional components, which would be sources for impurities and hence defects of the thin film 62, are needed within the reaction chamber 10 for the evaporation and/or sublimation process.


During the deposition process, the reaction chamber 10 can be filled with a second reaction atmosphere 118. In addition to a high vacuum as second reaction atmosphere 118, as preferably used for high purity thin films 62 consisting of the first material 126, also a suitable process gas G can be used as second reaction atmosphere 118. By this, evaporated and/or sublimated first material 126 (depicted as arrow 126 in “B” of FIG. 14, can react with the second reaction atmosphere 118 and the respective reaction product consisting of the first material 126 and the material of the process gas G of the second reaction atmosphere 118 is deposited onto the substrate surface 48. As an example, the first material 126 can be a metal and the process gas can be oxygen, resulting in an oxide of the metal deposited as thin film 62.


In summary, after step b) one or more thin films 62 are deposited onto the substrate surface 48. By using a second electromagnetic radiation 106, a wide range of first materials 126 can be used, where-by the range of possible compositions of materials of the one or more thin films 62 is further enlarged by choosing a suitable second reaction atmosphere 118. Further, an especially pure evaporation and/or sublimation of the first material 126 can be ensured. Hence, also building on the preferably defect free substrate sur-face 48, the one or more thin films 62 are preferably also free or at least depleted of substrate-induced defects.


In the last step c) of the method, depicted in FIG. 14 on the right and denoted by “C”, a third electromagnetic radiation 108 is used for illuminating the substrate 24 and the one or more thin films 62. This finally forms the solid-state component 100. In the particularly depicted embodiment, the third electromagnetic radiation 108 applies heat to the backside 50 of the substrate 24 and thereby indirectly to the one or more thin films 62.


The third electromagnetic radiation 108 can serve two purposes. First of all, the applied heat can be used to temper the solid-state component 100. A further reduction of the already low number of defects of the solid-state component 100 can thereby be provided.


Secondly, also a controlled cooling of the solid-state component 100 can be provided by a suitable variation, in particular reduction, of the intensity of the third electromagnetic radiation 108. Defects caused by different thermal expansions of the substrate 24 and the one or more thin films 62 can thereby be avoided.


Both the tempering and the controlled cooling, respectively, can be supported by filling the reaction chamber 10 with a suitable third reaction atmosphere 120.


In summary, the solid-state components 100 produced with a method shown in a very basic version in FIG. 14 comprises no or at least a very low number of defects, ideally such that qubit relaxation times and qubit coherence times above 100 μs, preferably above 1000 μs, even more preferably above 10 ms can be achieved. By that, such solid-state components 100 are splendidly suitable for a usage as basis of a quantum component 102, see FIG. 18, 19, in particular for a qubit.



FIG. 15 shows an optional sub-step performed of step a) of the method shown in FIG. 14. A buffer material 132 is evaporated and/or sublimated by a fourth electromagnetic radiation 110, again providing all advantages described above with respect to the usage of an external source of the energy needed for evaporation and/or sublimation processes.


The evaporated and/or sublimated buffer material 132 (see the respective arrow 132 in FIG. 15) is deposited onto the substrate surface 48 and forms a buffer layer 134. Again, a suitably chosen fourth reaction atmosphere 122 is used for supporting this deposition. In other words, the subsequent deposition of the one or more thin films 62 (see FIG. 17, 19) is done onto the buffer layer 134. The buffer layer can be used to equalize differences between the substrate 24 and the undermost thin film 62, in particular with respect to lattice parameters. Defects caused in the one or more thin films 62 by such differences can thereby be suppressed.


A snap-shot of a possible embodiment of step b) of the method is shown in FIG. 16. In particular, the actually depicted deposition process comprises that a first material 126 and a second material 128 are simultaneously evaporated and/or sublimated. The reaction chamber is filled with a suitable second reaction atmosphere 118.


In the depicted embodiment, the second electromagnetic radiation 106 comprises two component beams 114, one of them directed onto the first source 30 comprising the first material 126, the other directed onto the second source 32 comprising the second material 128. The respective component beam 114 is adoptedly chosen for the evaporation and/or sublimation of the respective material 126, 128.


The evaporated and/or sublimated first and second materials 126, 128, see the respective arrows 126, 128, are deposited together and form one thin film 62. For instance, both materials 126, 128 can be metal elements, and the thin film 62 is formed by an alloy of these metals.


Please note that the thin films 62 depicted in FIG. 16 comprise a multi layer structure, wherein also layers consisting of a third material 130 are present. If the respective second reaction atmosphere 118 for the deposition of the third material 130 is different to the second reaction atmosphere 118 suitable and used for the simultaneously deposition of the first and second material 126, 128 depicted in FIG. 16, conveniently a reaction chamber 10 with two reaction volumes 14, 16 (see FIG. 2) can be used, wherein one of the two deposition processes takes place in the first reaction volume 14 and the other in the second reaction volume 16.



FIG. 17 shows an optional sub-step performed between the last iteration of step b) and the following step c) or after step c) of the method shown in FIG. 14. A cover material 136 is evaporated and/or sublimated by a fifth electromagnetic radiation 112, again providing all advantages described above with respect to the usage of an external source of the energy needed for evaporation and/or sublimation processes.


The evaporated and/or sublimated cover material 136 (see the respective arrow 136 in FIG. 17) is deposited onto the thin films 62, in the particular example depicted in FIG. 17 a multi layer structure comprising four layers alternatingly consisting of a first material 126 and a second material 128, respectively, and forms a cover layer 138. Also for the deposition of the cover layer 138, a suitably chosen fifth reaction atmosphere 124 is used for supporting this particular deposition. The cover layer 138 shields the thin films 62 against external influences. Defects caused by such external influences, for instance undesired deposition of further material onto the topmost layer of the thin films 62, can thereby be avoided.


In FIG. 18, 19 quantum components 102 are shown, which are based on a solidstate component 100 according to the present invention. FIG. 18 shows a very simple quantum component 102, FIG. 19 a more sophisticated one. In addition, several patterning steps, usually performed by photolithography, etching, ion-milling and other suitable procedures are required to obtain a functioning quantum component.


The solid-state components 100 have in common that they comprise a low enough number of defects per cm2 and layer that have qubit relaxation times and qubit coherence times above 100 μs, preferably above 1000 μs, even more preferably above 10 ms and/or is produced by the method according to the present invention. The low number of defects of the solid-state component 100 provides long coherence times for the quantum component 102.


The quantum component 102 shown in FIG. 18 comprises a single thin film 62 consisting of a first material 126. The thin film 62 is deposited onto a substrate 24.


In contrast to that, FIG. 19 depicts a quantum component 102 comprising thin films 62 with a multi-layer structure of six layers in total, in particular a three layer pattern repeated two times. The three different layers consist, starting from the downmost layer and going up, of a first material 126, the reaction product of a second material and an element of the second reaction atmosphere 118, and a third material 130.


In addition, the quantum component 102 comprises a buffer layer 134 consisting of a buffer material 132 between the substrate 24 and the downmost layer of the thin films 62. As already described with respect to FIG. 15, defects caused by the transition between the substrate 24 and the following thin films 62 can be avoided.


Further, the quantum component 102 comprises a cover layer 138 consisting of a cover material 136 covering and protecting the thin films 62. As already described with respect to FIG. 17, defects caused by external influences, especially reactions with the ambient atmosphere, for instance undesired depositions of further material, can be avoided.


As described in the foregoing a plurality of thin films 62 can be deposited on the substrate surface 48, the various thin films 62 can be made of different materials in order to form mulit-layerd and mulit-material films 62 on the substrate 24.


An element, such as a metal is used for the first material and/or the second material of the first and second source elements 30, 32 in order to form the thin film 62.


To exemplify the technical feasibility of the present invention, FIGS. 20-28 show experimental validations of the technique for Al2O3 substrates 24 on which Ta and Nb thin films 62 have been grown. Both Ta and Nb are superconducting at several K and are therefore suitable for the fabrication of qubit devices.



FIG. 20 shows the surface diffraction pattern of a Al2O3 substrate 24 prepared by the method of the present invention, obtained by Reflection High-Energy Electron Diffraction (RHEED). The RHEED beam impinged on the surface 48 with a polar angle of about 2°.


The many spots exemplify a highly ordered two-dimensional crystal surface. The mirror-symmetric pattern of diagonal lines shows that the RHEED beam is aligned along one of the principal crystal axes of the substrate. In this case, the surface reconstruction is rotated by +9° with respect to the bulk lattice. This becomes clear in FIG. 21, where the substrate 24 was rotated by 9° counterclockwise with respect to the RHEED beam, aligning the RHEED beam with the surface reconstruction.


The symmetric pattern of concentric circles without any other observable spots evidences a single surface reconstruction with a single rotation of +9° on the entire substrate surface. The −9° orientation is entirely absent, confirming the feasibility of the method to select one out of several energetically equivalent surface reconstructions according to the present invention.


By changing the pressure of the oxygen process gas to 0.75×10−1 hPa, the chemical potential for oxygen atoms to leave the surface 48 is shifted and the minimum-energy configuration of the surface 48 is no longer the single-rotation reconstruction observed for the lower pressure. FIG. 22 shows that in this case, both surface rotation orientations are equally favorable. The RHEED pattern is mirror symmetric, with equal intensity for the left-hand-side and the right-hand-side spots.



FIG. 23 shows the surface morphology of the substrate imaged by RHEED in FIG. 20, after the preparation process. The surface is highly ordered and shows a minimum-energy terrace-and-step structure, with straight terrace edges 66 oriented with an angle of about +25° with respect to the principal crystal axes, which are roughly aligned with the edge of the image.



FIG. 24 shows the height profile extracted along the line in FIG. 23. The terraces of this substrate have a width of about 500 μm and the steps between terraces 58 have a height difference of about 0.43 nm. For Al2O3, this corresponds to the separation between two Al layers within the bulk Al2O3 structure. These Al layers correspond to the ‘black’ layers in the schematic representation of FIGS. 3-8. The surface reconstruction observed in FIG. 20 correspond to an additional ‘black’ layer on top of the bulk substrate 24.



FIG. 25 shows an AFM image of the surface of a Ta film 62 grown on such a template under ultrapure conditions and at a high surface temperature that allows the long-range displacement of Ta atoms along the surface. The different single crystal domains of the film originally nucleate in different orientations which are, however, constrained by the long-range order of the surface reconstruction of the underlying crystalline surface. They overgrow and possibly incorporate neighboring domains to form large flat single crystalline regions with extremely low defect density and a lateral extension about 40 times their thickness.


The single crystalline nature of the domains is evident from the single atomic steps visible on the surface, and the alignment of the step and domain edges along the axes of the underlying epitaxial template with a sixfold (every 60°) hexagonal symmetry.



FIG. 26 shows a similar SEM image from a film 62 grown under nominally identical conditions, with roughly twice the lateral resolutions as compared to FIG. 25.


The growth was stopped, however, after only about ⅕ of the layer thickness compared to FIG. 25. The image therefore represents a snapshot of the process of coalescence between the different, independently nucleated epitaxial grains, now starting to form laterally connected, single crystalline grains of successively larger size.


The X-ray scan shown in FIG. 27 of the same film as in FIG. 25. This measurement averages essentially over the entire sample surface and reveals that the film 62 is perfectly single crystalline within the resolution of the experiment, with the sharp and distinct peaks corresponding to a single family of crystal planes of the Ta oriented parallel to the substrate 24. This result again demonstrates both the very high structural perfection and the complete epitaxial alignment of the film 62 with the substrate 24.


Finally, FIG. 28 shows a cross-sectional SEM image of a layer structure cleaved after deposition, showing a Nb film 62 on a Si substrate 24 without epitaxial alignment, and grown at a substrate temperature of approximately 250° C. The film 62 is not epitaxial, and shows a disordered, columnar structure with a high defect density. According to the invention, this can be avoided by using the high-temperature annealing substrate preparation technique combined with the ultraclean subsequent deposition in a seamlessly integrated in-situ process.


It is also possible to grow layers of compounds as thin films 62. For this purpose a method of forming a layer 62 of a compound having a thickness selected in the range of a monolayer to several μm on a substrate is carried out. As described in the foregoing the substrate 24 could be a single crystal wafer. The substrate 24 is arranged in a process chamber, such as the reaction chamber 10 disclosed in FIGS. 1 and 2, the reaction chamber 10 comprising one or more sources 30, 32 of source material, the method comprising the steps of:

    • providing a reaction atmosphere in the process chamber 10, the reaction atmosphere comprising a pre-defined process gas G and a reaction chamber pressure;
    • irradiating the one or more sources 30, 32 with laser light from one of the first and second source heating lasers 36, 38 in order to sublimate and/or evaporate atoms and/or molecules of the source material;
    • reacting the evaporated atoms and/or molecules with the process gas and forming the layer of the compound on the substrate.


In this context it should be noted that the laser light from the first and second source heating lasers 36, 38 is directed at the surface of the source directly facing the substrate 24.


The reaction chamber pressure is typically selected in the range of 10−6 to 101 hPa. On carrying out the method of forming a compound the step of providing a reaction atmosphere usually comprises an evacuation of the process chamber 10 to a first pressure and then introducing the process gas G to obtain a second pressure, the reaction chamber pressure in the reaction chamber 10.


The first pressure is typically lower than the second pressure and the second pressure is selected in the range of 10−11 to 10−2 hPa.


A temperature of at least the shroud and/or of an inner wall of the reaction chamber 10 is temperature controlled to a temperature selected in the range of 77 K to 500 K.


The source material is selected from the group of members consisting of Sc, Ti, V, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, Zr, Nb, Mo, Ru, Hf, Al, Mg, Ca, Sr, Ba, Y, Rh, Ta, W, Re, Ir, Ga, In, Si, Ge, Sn, Eu, Ce, Pd, Ag, Pt, Au, alloys of the foregoing and combinations of the foregoing.


The laser light irradiating the one or more sources 30, 32 with laser light in order to sublimate and/or evaporate atoms and/or molecules of the source material is focused at the one or more sources 30, 32 with an intensity selected in the range of 1 to 2000 W for a spot size of 1 mm2 and a distance between the one or more sources and the substrate selected in the range of 50 to 120 mm.


The laser light irradiating the one or more sources 30, 32 with laser light having a wavelength in the range of 280 nm to 20 μm, especially in the range of 450 nm to 1.2 μm.


The compound deposited on the substrate can be one of an oxide, a nitride, a hydride, a fluoride, a chloride, a bromide, an iodide, a phosphide, a sulphide, a selenide or a mercury compound.


At higher pressures of the process gas G, the evaporated atoms or molecules suffer more collisions with the gas atoms, leading to a randomization of their direction and kinetic energies. This results in a much smaller fraction of the evaporated atoms or molecules reaching the substrate 24, which, however, may still be useful for forming a layer 62 in some cases, in particular for short working distances and large substrates. The formation of the compound or oxide layer 62 on the substrate 24 under these conditions may take place under several conditions:

    • growth mode 1: the source material 126 reacts or oxidizes at the source surface and evaporates or sublimates as a compound or oxide. It then deposits as compound or oxide on the substrate.
    • growth mode 2: the source material 126 evaporates or sublimates without reaction, and reacts with the gas G by collision with gas atoms on its trajectory from the source 30, 32 to the substrate 24 and deposits as compound or oxide.
    • growth mode 3: the source material 126 evaporates or sublimates without reaction, travels without reaction, and reacts when or after it deposits on the substrate 24 with gas atoms or molecules impinging on the substrate 24.
    • growth mode 4: any combination of the above.


Of particular interest is a transport reaction in which the source material 126 reacts with the gas G to form a metastable compound with a higher evaporation/sublimation rate than the source material 126 itself. This material further reacts in the gas phase and deposits as the final compound as a thin film 62, or deposits on the substrate 24 and reacts with further gas G to form the final, stable compound as a thin film 62.


Specific examples of compounds are:


TiO2: for TiO2 the source material is Ti, the compound deposited on the substrate is predominantly anatase or rutile TiO2, the laser light has a wavelength selected in the range of 515 to 1070 nm, in particular in the range of 1000 to 1070 nm, with an intensity in the range of 1 to 2000 W corresponding to a power density of 0.001 to 2 KW/mm2 on the source surface, in particular in the range of 100 to 200 W corresponding to a power density of 0.1 to 0.2 KW/mm2, a process gas being a mixture of O2 and O3, in particular with an O3 content of 5 to 10 weight %, with a reaction chamber pressure of 10−11 to 1 hPa, in particular of 10−6 to 10−2 hPa, and a compound layer thickness selected in the range of 0 to 1 μm obtainable within a time period of 0 to 180 min, especially 700 nm within a time period of 15 to 30 min with a working distance of 10 mm to 1 m, in particular 40 to 80 mm and a substrate diameter of 5 to 300 mm, in particular 51 mm.


NiO: for NiO the source material is Ni, the compound deposited on the substrate is predominantly NiO, the laser light has a wavelength selected in the range of 515 to 1070 nm, in particular in the range of 1000 to 1070 nm, with an intensity in the range of 1 to 2000 W corresponding to a power density of 0.001 to 2 kW/mm2 on the source surface, in particular in the range of 100 to 350 W corresponding to a power density of 0.1 to 0.35 KW/mm2, a process gas being a mixture of O2 and O3, in particular with an O3 content of 5 to 10 weight %, with a reaction chamber pressure of 10−11 to 1 hPa, in particular of 10−6 to 10−2 hPa, and a compound layer thickness selected in the range of 0 to 1 μm obtainable within a time period of 0 to 50 min, especially 500 nm within a time period of 10 to 20 min with a working distance of 10 mm to 1 m, in particular 40 to 80 mm and a substrate diameter of 5 to 300 mm, in particular 51 mm.


Co3O4: for Co3O4 the source material is Co, the compound deposited on the substrate is predominantly Co3O4, the laser light has a wavelength selected in the range of 515 to 1070 nm, in particular in the range of 1000 to 1070 nm, with an intensity in the range of 1 to 2000 W corresponding to a power density of 0.001 to 2 kW/mm2 on the source surface, in particular in the range of 100 to 200 W corresponding to a power density of 0.1 to 0.2 KW/mm2, a process gas being a mixture of O2 and O3, in particular with an O3 content of 5 to 10 weight %, with a reaction chamber pressure of 10−11 to 1 hPa, in particular of 10−6 to 10−2 hPa, and a compound layer thickness selected in the range of 0 to 1 μm obtainable within a time period of 0 to 90 min, especially 200 nm within a time period of 10 to 20 min with a working distance of 10 mm to 1 m, in particular 40 to 80 mm and a substrate diameter of 5 to 300 mm, in particular 51 mm.


Fe3O4: For Fe3O4 the source material is Fe, the compound deposited on the substrate is predominantly Fe3O4, the laser light has a wavelength selected in the range of 515 to 1070 nm, in particular in the range of 1000 to 1070 nm, with an intensity in the range of 1 to 2000 W corresponding to a power density of 0.001 to 2 kW/mm2 on the source surface, in particular in the range of 100 to 200 W corresponding to a power density of 0.1 to 0.2 KW/mm2, a process gas being a mixture of O2 and O3, in particular with an O3 content of 5 to 10 weight %, with a reaction chamber pressure of 10−11 to 1 hPa, in particular of 10−6 to 10−2 hPa, and a compound layer thickness selected in the range of 0 to 10 μm obtainable within a time period of 0 to 30 min, especially of 5 μm within a time period of 10 to 20 min with a working distance of 10 mm to 1 m, in particular 40 to 80 mm and a substrate diameter of 5 to 300 mm, in particular 51 mm.


CuO: For CuO the source material is Cu, the compound deposited on the substrate is predominantly CuO, the laser light has a wavelength selected in the range of 500 to 1070 nm, in particular in the range of 500 to 550 nm, with an intensity in the range of 1 to 900 W corresponding to a power density of 0.001 to 0.9 kW/mm2 on the source surface, in particular in the range of 200 to 400 W corresponding to a power density of 0.2 to 0.4 KW/mm2, a process gas being a mixture of O2 and O3, in particular with an O3 content of 5 to 10 weight %, with a reaction chamber pressure of 10−11 to 1 hPa, in particular of 10−6 to 10−2 hPa, and a compound layer thickness selected in the range of 0 to 1 μm obtainable within a time period of 0 to 100 min, especially of 0.15 μm within a time period of 15 to 30 min with a working distance of 10 mm to 1 m, in particular 40 to 80 mm and a substrate diameter of 5 to 300 mm, in particular 51 mm.


Vanadium Oxide: For Vanadium Oxide the source material is V, the compound deposited on the substrate is predominantly V2O3, VO2 or V2O5, the laser light has a wavelength selected in the range of 515 to 1100 nm, in particular in the range of 1000 to 1100 nm, with an intensity in the range of 1 to 2000 W corresponding to a power density of 0.001 to 2 KW/mm2 on the source surface, in particular in the range of 60 to 120 W corresponding to a power density of 0.06 to 0.12 KW/mm2, a process gas being a mixture of O2 and O3, in particular with an O3 content of 5 to 10 weight %, with a reaction chamber pressure of 10−11 to 1 hPa, in particular of 10−6 to 10−2 hPa, and a compound layer thickness selected in the range of 0 to 1 μm obtainable within a time period of 0 to 60 min, especially of 0.3 μm within a time period of 10 to 20 min with a working distance of 10 mm to 1 m, in particular 40 to 80 mm and a substrate diameter of 5 to 300 mm, in particular 51 mm.


Nb2O5: For Nb2O5 the source material is Nb, the compound deposited on the substrate is predominantly Nb2O5, the laser light has a wavelength selected in the range of 515 to 1100 nm, in particular in the range of 1000 to 1100 nm, with an intensity in the range of 1 to 2000 W corresponding to a power density of 0.001 to 2 kW/mm2 on the source surface, in particular in the range of 200 to 400 W corresponding to a power density of 0.2 to 0.4 KW/mm2, a process gas being a mixture of O2 and O3, in particular with an O3 content of 5 to 10 weight %, with a reaction chamber pressure of 10−11 to 1 hPa, in particular of 10−6 to 10−2 hPa, and a compound layer thickness selected in the range of 0 to 2 μm obtainable within a time period of 0 to 20 min, especially of 1.4 μm within a time period of 10 to 20 min with a working distance of 10 mm to 1 m, in particular 40 to 80 mm and a substrate diameter of 5 to 300 mm, in particular 51 mm.


Cr2O3: For Cr2O3 the source material is Cr, the compound deposited on the substrate is predominantly Cr2O3, the laser light has a wavelength selected in the range of 515 to 1100 nm, in particular in the range of 1000 to 1100 nm, with an intensity in the range of 1 to 2000 W corresponding to a power density of 0.001 to 2 kW/mm2 on the source surface, in particular in the range of 20 to 80 W corresponding to a power density of 0.02 to 0.08 KW/mm2, a process gas being a mixture of O2 and O3, in particular with an O3 content of 5 to 10 weight %, with a reaction chamber pressure of 10−11 to 1 hPa, in particular of 10−6 to 10−2 hPa, and a compound layer thickness selected in the range of 0 to 1 μm obtainable within a time period of 0 to 30 min, especially of 0.5 μm within a time period of 10 to 20 min with a working distance of 10 mm to 1 m, in particular 40 to 80 mm and a substrate diameter of 5 to 300 mm, in particular 51 mm.


RuO2: For RuO2 the source material is Ru, the compound deposited on the substrate is predominantly RuO2, the laser light has a wavelength selected in the range of 515 to 1100 nm, in particular in the range of 1000 to 1100 nm, with an intensity in the range of 1 to 2000 W corresponding to a power density of 0.001 to 2 KW/mm2 on the source surface, in particular in the range of 200 to 600 W corresponding to a power density of 0.2 to 0.6 kW/mm2, a process gas being a mixture of O2 and O3, in particular with an O3 content of 5 to 10 weight %, with a reaction chamber pressure of 10−11 to 1 hPa, in particular of 10−6 to 10−2 hPa, and a compound layer thickness selected in the range of 0 to 1 μm obtainable within a time period of 0 to 300 min, especially of 0.06 μm within a time period of 10 to 20 min with a working distance of 10 mm to 1 m, in particular 40 to 80 mm and a substrate diameter of 5 to 300 mm, in particular 51 mm.


ZnO: For ZnO the source material is Zn, the compound deposited on the substrate is predominantly ZnO, the laser light has a wavelength selected in the range of 515 to 1100 nm, in particular in the range of 1000 to 1100 nm, with an intensity in the range of 1 to 2000 W corresponding to a power density of 0.001 to 2 KW/mm2 on the source surface, in particular in the range of 5 to 10 W corresponding to a power density of 0.005 to 0.010 KW/mm2, a process gas being a mixture of O2 and O3, in particular with an O3 content of 5 to 10 weight %, with a reaction chamber pressure of 10−11 to 1 hPa, in particular of 10−6 to 10−2 hPa, and a compound layer thickness selected in the range of 0 to 1 μm obtainable within a time period of 0 to 20 min, especially of 1.4 μm within a time period of 10 to 20 min with a working distance of 10 mm to 1 m, in particular 40 to 80 mm and a substrate diameter of 5 to 300 mm, in particular 51 mm.


MnO: For MnO the source material is Mn, the compound deposited on the substrate is predominantly MnO, the laser light has a wavelength selected in the range of 515 to 1100 nm, in particular in the range of 1000 to 1100 nm, with an intensity in the range of 1 to 2000 W corresponding to a power density of 0.001 to 2 kW/mm2 on the source surface, in particular in the range of 5 to 10 W corresponding to a power density of 0.005 to 0.010 KW/mm2, a process gas being a mixture of O2 and O3, in particular with an O3 content of 5 to 10 weight %, with a reaction chamber pressure of 10−11 to 1 hPa, in particular of 10−6 to 10−2 hPa, and a compound layer thickness selected in the range of 0 to 1 μm obtainable within a time period of 0 to 20 min, especially of 1.4 μm within a time period of 10 to 20 min with a working distance of 10 mm to 1 m, in particular 40 to 80 mm and a substrate diameter of 5 to 300 mm, in particular 51 mm.


Sc2O3: For Sc2O3 the source material is Sc, the compound deposited on the substrate is predominantly Sc2O3, the laser light has a wavelength selected in the range of 515 to 1100 nm, in particular in the range of 1000 to 1100 nm, with an intensity in the range of 1 to 2000 W corresponding to a power density of 0.001 to 2 kW/mm2 on the source surface, in particular in the range of 20 to 50 W corresponding to a power density of 0.02 to 0.05 KW/mm2, a process gas being a mixture of O2 and O3, in particular with an O3 content of 5 to 10 weight %, with a reaction chamber pressure of 10−11 to 1 hPa, in particular of 10−6 to 10−2 hPa, and a compound layer thickness selected in the range of 0 to 1 μm obtainable within a time period of 0 to 20 min, especially of 1.3 μm within a time period of 10 to 20 min with a working distance of 10 mm to 1 m, in particular 40 to 80 mm and a substrate diameter of 5 to 300 mm, in particular 51 mm.


Mo4O11 or MoO3: For Mo4O11 or MoOs the source material is Mo, the compound deposited on the substrate is predominantly Mo4O11 or MoO3, the laser light has a wavelength selected in the range of 515 to 1100 nm, in particular in the range of 1000 to 1100 nm, with an intensity in the range of 1 to 2000 W corresponding to a power density of 0.001 to 2 KW/mm2 on the source surface, in particular in the range of 400 to 800 W corresponding to a power density of 0.4 to 0.8 KW/mm2, a process gas being a mixture of O2 and O3, in particular with an O3 content of 5 to 10 weight %, with a reaction chamber pressure of 10−11 to 1 hPa, in particular of 10−6 to 10−2 hPa, and a compound layer thickness selected in the range of 0 to 4 μm obtainable within a time period of 0 to 30 min, especially of 4.0 μm within a time period of 10 to 20 min with a working distance of 10 mm to 1 m, in particular 40 to 80 mm and a substrate diameter of 5 to 300 mm, in particular 51 mm.


ZrO2: For ZrO2 the source material is Zr, the compound deposited on the substrate is predominantly ZrO2, the laser light has a wavelength selected in the range of 515 to 1100 nm, in particular in the range of 1000 to 1100 nm, with an intensity in the range of 1 to 2000 W corresponding to a power density of 0.001 to 2 kW/mm2 on the source surface, in particular in the range of 300 to 500 W corresponding to a power density of 0.3 to 0.5 kW/mm2, a process gas being a mixture of O2 and O3, in particular with an O3 content of 5 to 10 weight %, with a reaction chamber pressure of 10−11 to 1 hPa, in particular of 10−6 to 10−2 hPa, and a compound layer thickness selected in the range of 0 to 1 μm obtainable within a time period of 0 to 100 min, especially of 0.2 μm within a time period of 15 to 25 min with a working distance of 10 mm to 1 m, in particular 40 to 80 mm and a substrate diameter of 5 to 300 mm, in particular 51 mm.


HfO2: For HfO2 the source material is Hf, the compound deposited on the substrate is predominantly HfO2, the laser light has a wavelength selected in the range of 515 to 1100 nm, in particular in the range of 1000 to 1100 nm, with an intensity in the range of 1 to 2000 W corresponding to a power density of 0.001 to 2 kW/mm2 on the source surface, in particular in the range of 250 to 400 W corresponding to a power density of 0.25 to 0.4 KW/mm2, a process gas being a mixture of O2 and O3, in particular with an O3 content of 5 to 10 weight %, with a reaction chamber pressure of 10−11 to 1 hPa, in particular of 10−6 to 10−2 hPa, and a compound layer thickness selected in the range of 0 to 1 μm obtainable within a time period of 0 to 40 min, especially of 0.6 μm within a time period of 15 to 25 min with a working distance of 10 mm to 1 m, in particular 40 to 80 mm and a substrate diameter of 5 to 300 mm, in particular 51 mm.


Al2O3: For Al2O3 the source material is Al, the compound deposited on the substrate is predominantly Al2O3, the laser light has a wavelength selected in the range of 515 to 1100 nm, in particular in the range of 1000 to 1100 nm, with an intensity in the range of 1 to 2000 W corresponding to a power density of 0.001 to 2 kW/mm2 on the source surface, in particular in the range of 200 to 400 W corresponding to a power density of 0.2 to 0.4 KW/mm2, a process gas being a mixture of O2 and O3, in particular with an O3 content of 5 to 10 weight %, with a reaction chamber pressure of 10−11 to 1 hPa, in particular of 10−6 to 10−2 hPa, and a compound layer thickness selected in the range of 0 to 1 μm obtainable within a time period of 0 to 20 min, especially of 1.0 μm within a time period of 15 to 25 min with a working distance of 10 mm to 1 m, in particular 40 to 80 mm and a substrate diameter of 5 to 300 mm, in particular 51 mm. For Al, higher growth rates of more than 1 μm per minute are achievable due to growth mode 4 with laser powers of 300 to 500 W.


Thermal laser evaporation (TLE) is a particularly promising technique for the growth of metal films. Here, we demonstrate that thermal laser evaporation is also suitable for the growth of amorphous and polycrystalline oxide films. We report on a spectrum of binary oxide films that have been deposited by laser-induced evaporation of elemental metal sources in oxygen-ozone atmospheres. The oxide deposition by TLE is accompanied by an oxidation of the elemental metal source, which systematically affects the source molecular flux. Fifteen elemental metals were successfully used as sources for oxide films grown on unheated substrates, employing one and the same laser optic. The source materials ranged from refractory metals with low vapor pressures, such as Hf, Mo, and Ru, to Zn, which readily sublimates at low temperatures. These results reveal that TLE is well suited for the growth of ultraclean oxide films.


Oxide films 62 are of great interest for realizing new functionalities due to their broad spectrum of intriguing and useful properties. Virtually all deposition techniques are used for the growth of oxide films, including electron-beam evaporation (EBE), molecular beam epitaxy (MBE), pulsed laser deposition (PLD), sputtering, and atomic layer deposition (ALD). Thermal laser evaporation (TLE) has recently been demonstrated to be a promising technique for growing ultraclean metal films because it combines the advantages of MBE, PLD, and EBE by thermally evaporating metallic sources with a laser beam.


By utilizing the adsorption-controlled growth mode, MBE is particularly suited for growing films of superior structural quality. In MBE, molecular fluxes of source materials are generated by evaporating the source materials. However, ohmic heaters, which are preferred for this purpose, limit the use of reactive background gases. This restriction can be critical for the growth of complex metal oxides. Furthermore, elements with low vapor pressure, such as B, C, Ru, Ir, and W, cannot be evaporated by external ohmic heating. To evaporate those elements requires EBE, but that technique is not optimal for achieving precise and stable evaporation rates. PLD transfers a source material onto a substrate via short-period. high-power laser pulses. Although PLD can operate with a high background pressure of reactive gases, the precise control of the material composition is challenging, in particular if the film composition is to be varied smoothly.


Laser-assisted evaporation had been proposed and attempted for the thin film deposition after the invention of laser. However, the evaporation by continuous-wave (cw) laser was abandoned due to the formation of nonstoichiometric films, while the evaporation by high-power density pulsed laser led to the invention of PLD. Along with the development of cw laser technology, TLE has been recently rediscovered as a candidate for epitaxial growth of complex materials, which can combine the advantages of MBE, PLD, and EBE while eliminating their respective weaknesses. Lasers 36, 38 placed outside the vacuum chamber 12 evaporate pure metal sources 30, 32 by local heating, which requires only a simple setup and allows the precise evaporation control of each source element, high purity of the source materials, and the almost unlimited choice of background gas G composition and pressure. In many cases, the locally molten source 30, 32 forms its own crucible. By avoiding impurity incorporation from the crucible, the source 30, 32 is guaranteed to remain highly pure. The potential of TLE to deposit elemental metallic and semiconducting films 62 has been realized by the deposition of a wide range of elements as films 62, ranging from high-vapor-pressure elements such as Bi and Zn to low-vapor-pressure elements such as W and Ta.


Whereas using TLE to grow oxide films 62 and heterostructures may also be highly advantageous, it is not obvious that it is possible in an oxidizing atmosphere. Oxidation of the heat source (filament), which plagues MBE and EBE, is trivial to avoid in TLE. However, the metal sources 30, 32 themselves are prone to oxidation when heated by a laser beam in an oxidizing atmosphere. If the source oxidizes, the laser radiation is no longer absorbed only by the original source material but also by its oxide. Indeed, the entire source or the surface of the source may oxidize, or the oxide may form a partial layer floating on a melt pool. In addition, the molecular fluxes of the source materials may be generated by both the metallic part of source and by the source material oxide.


To do so, we performed a series of evaporation experiments in which elemental metal sources 30, 32 having high or low vapor pressures were evaporated by laser irradiation in a variety of oxygen-ozone atmospheres. For simplicity in exploring the evaporation process, we used substrates 24 of unheated Si (100) wafers coated by their native oxide. We readily succeeded in growing oxide films 62, using the same laser optics and laser wavelengths of 1030-1070 nm for every element explored as the first and second source heating lasers 36, 38. Our experiments reveal that the evaporation of elemental sources in strongly oxidizing atmospheres is applicable for oxide film growth despite the oxidation of the source 30, 32 during the process. We also find that different oxide phases are obtainable in a given atmosphere by tuning the oxidizing atmosphere. The deposition process is furthermore found to display a characteristic variation as a function of the oxygen-ozone pressure.


A schematic of the TLE chamber 10 used in this study is shown in FIG. 1. Separated by a 60-mm working distance, a high-purity cylindrical metal source 30, 32 and the 2-inch Si (100) substrate 24 are supported by Ta-based holders 22. We used a 1030-nm fiber-coupled disk laser 36 and a 1070-nm fiber laser 38 incident at 45° at the top surface to heat the sources 30, 32. As determined by the availability of these lasers 36, 38, we used the former laser 36 to evaporate Ti, Co, Fe, Cu and Ni, and the latter 38 for the other elements. No difference in the performance of the two lasers 36, 38 was noted. Both lasers 36, 38 illuminated approximately elliptical areas of ˜1 mm2 on the sources 30, 32. For temperature sensing, we positioned type C W-Re thermocouples on the backside of the Si wafers 24 and at the bottom of the sources 30, 32.


A flowing oxygen-ozone mixture 20 and a cascaded pumping system 18 comprising two turbomolecular pumps and a diaphragm pump connected in series was employed for the precise control of the chamber pressure Pox, which was varied between <10−8 and 10−2 hPa. Ozone accounted for approximately 10 wt % of the total flow provided by the glow-discharge continuous-flow ozone generator (not shown). The setting of the valve controlling this gas flow was held constant during each deposition to provide a constant flow. During the evaporation process, Pox and the temperatures of source 30, 32 and substrate 24 were monitored by pressure gauges and the thermocouples (not shown). Using the same deposition geometry, we used TLE to evaporate fifteen different metal elements to deposit oxide films 62. Each element was evaporated in several runs using the same laser power and laser optics but different values of Pox ranging from 10−8 to 10−2hPa.


Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was employed to measure the film thickness and to study its microstructure. The crystal structures of the deposited films 62 were identified by x-ray diffraction. Photoemission spectroscopy was performed to reveal the oxidation states of the TLE-grown TiO2 films 62. If a film 62 was found to be amorphous, it was later subjected to an additional two-hour Ar anneal at 500° C. for crystallization.


Owing to the consumption of the oxygen-ozone gas mixture caused by oxidation of the source 30, 32 and the evaporated material, Pox frequently decreased during deposition, as illustrated by FIG. 29. This figure shows Pox during the evaporation of Ti at several gas pressures. The laser irradiation time for TLE of Ti is 15 minutes. Pox decreases as the laser 36, 38 is turned on at time of ˜300 sec, and it quickly returns to the initial background value for higher pressures as the laser is turned off at ˜1200 sec. Oxidation is more active at the higher temperatures, therefore, the decrease of Pox can be predominantly attributed to the oxidation of the elemental source. The maximum amount of oxygen required to oxidize the evaporated material is less than 1% of the inlet gas flow, which cannot account for the observed pressure change. After deposition at 10−2 hPa with 160 W laser, the Ti source 30, 32 is covered by a white substance, which most probably consists of TiO2. Other elemental sources are also oxidized after use. This substantial oxidation of the sources 30, 32, to which we referred in the introduction, affects the absorption of the laser light, the evaporation process, and the vapor species deposited on the substrates 24.


However, the decrease of the background pressure is not observed in all instances. The pressure change is small or even absent in two cases: first, if the source 30, 32 has already been fully oxidized at the beginning of the process; second, if the oxidation of the source 30, 32 is intrinsically unfavorable. The thermal laser evaporation of Ni in the oxidizing atmosphere is an example of the first case. A decrease of Pox is observed only for Pox<10−4 hPa. At higher pressure, the Ni source 30, 32 becomes covered by its oxide. Further oxidation is therefore suppressed, and the decrease of Pox disappears. The predominant vapor species obtained by heating Ni under strongly oxidizing conditions is therefore provided by NiO. The thermal laser evaporation of Cu is an example of the second case, as the oxidation of Cu is relatively unfavorable. Above 1000° C. and in an oxygen pressure range of 10−4-10−2 hPa, metallic Cu is more stable than its oxides. In the experiment, the source temperature in the irradiated area exceeds 1085° C., as is evident from the fact that the Cu is locally molten. At this temperature, liquid Cu is the thermodynamically stable phase, and elemental Cu is expected to provide the dominant vapor species. Indeed, no significant change of the chamber pressure occurs during the evaporation of Cu as shown in Figure S3. In agreement, the laser-irradiated area of a Cu source 30, 32 is metallic after the TLE process.


We have tested fifteen metallic elements as sources for the TLE growth of oxide films (Table 1). FIG. 30 shows the grazing-incidence XRD patterns of TLE-grown TiO2, Fe3O4, HfO2, V2O3, NiO, and Nb2O5 films. These patterns are typical for all binary oxides investigated here. As shown, the films 62 are polycrystalline and, in many cases, single-phase. Most elements provided polycrystalline films 62 on the unheated Si substrates 24 except for Cr, which formed an amorphous oxide. A subsequent two-hour 500° C. Ar anneal transformed this layer into a polycrystalline Cr2O3 film 62. Table 1 summarizes the observed oxide phases. The Ti, V, and Mo oxides formed several phases, with Pox determining which phase was obtained. In the case of V, for example, V2O3, VO2, or V2O5 films 62 are obtained by increasing Pox from 10−4 to 10−2 hPa. For the other elements, we observed only a single oxidation state within the Pox range used.


To investigate the structure of the films 62 in more detail, we performed cross-sectional SEM. As shown in FIG. 31, which displays the SEM cross sections of the films 62 of FIG. 30, most of the polycrystalline films have a columnar structure. The ratio between the measured substrate temperature and the melting point of the deposited oxide ranges from 0.05 to 0.2. The observed columnar structure is therefore consistent with the zone model of film growth, which for the conditions used here predicts the formation of a columnar microstructure. The crystal structure of the deposited oxide nevertheless affects the film structure. Mo oxide films grown at 10−3 and 10−2 hPa comprise prismatic and hexagonal plates, respectively. The films 62 shown in FIG. 31 were grown at rates of several Å/s; these rates were chosen as typical for the growth of oxide films. The rates (see FIG. 31) were measured by dividing the film thickness at the wafer center by the laser irradiation time. The deposition rates are not limited to the values presented. Indeed, they increase super-linearly with laser power.


As the source 30,32 is heated locally, it behaves like a flat, small-area evaporation source 30, 32, providing as function of emission angle a cosine-type flux distribution. Indeed, SEM measurements show that the films 62 are thinner towards the wafer edge. With the evaporation parameters we used, the reduction of the film thickness towards the edge equals ˜20% in most cases, slightly higher than the theoretically expected value of ˜15%. We attribute this effect to the notable pitting of the source during evaporation, which concentrates the molecular flux.


Our studies show that, as expected, the phase of the deposited oxide is a function of the oxidizing gas pressure. This behavior is illustrated for Ti and Ni films 62 in FIG. 32. This figure provides the XRD patterns of such films grown in several different Pox. In the case of Ti, polycrystalline hexagonal Ti films are obtained if the deposition is made without oxygen-ozone. With increasing Pox, sub-stoichiometric TiO, rutile TiO2, and anatase TiO2 films 62 are deposited. TiO is a well-known volatile suboxide of Ti. It was formed in a weakly oxidizing environment with Pox˜ 10−6 hPa. The peaks at 37.36°, 43.50°, and 63.18° (FIG. 5a, red curve) indicate cubic TiO. Rutile TiOz appears in the film for Pox˜ 10−4 hPa. Gray lines mark the expected diffraction peak positions of rutile TiO2. At 10−3 hPa, anatase TiO2 is generated together with the rutile phase as marked by the purple stars in FIG. 5. Owing to its low surface free energy, the metastable TiO2 anatase phase is preferably obtained by most synthesis and deposition methods. High-energy conditions are usually required to transform the anatase phase to the rutile phase or to synthesize rutile-phase TiO2 directly. We observe the preferential formation of rutile-phase TiO2, although, given by the thermal energies of the evaporated atoms and molecules, TLE is a low-energy process. At 10−2 hPa, the deposited films lose their crystallinity.


The oxidation states of the TLE-grown TiO2 films 62 were analyzed by XPS and compared to TiO2 films grown by EBE. Whereas the as-deposited EBE sample comprises a significant amount of Ti3+, TLE samples contain mostly Ti4+. We attribute this phenomenon to the oxygen-ozone background, which suppresses the thermal dissociation of TiO2, TiO2(s)→TiO(g)+½ O2(g), and oxidizes the deposited material.


Interestingly, we have found that the oxidation behavior of TLE-grown Ni oxide films 62 differs markedly from that of Ti oxide films 62. Under UHV conditions, a cubic phase is found also for metallic Ni (FIG. 32b). Although the Ni source surface 30 is oxidized at Pox˜ 10−6 hPa (as evidenced in a decrease of the chamber pressure), the obtained films 62 show metallic behavior also at this Pox. We attribute this to the high oxidation potential of Ni and to Ni having a higher vapor pressure than NiO. The majority vapor species therefore originates from unoxidized Ni in the irradiated hot area. Furthermore, the Ni deposited on the substrate 24 does not oxidize significantly at the low substrate temperature. The NiO phase evolves gradually with increasing Pox. The diffraction peak positions expected for the NiO phase are present in FIG. 32, showing the formation of cubic NiO. As evidenced by the presence of both metal and oxide peaks, the Ni film 62 deposited at 10−5 hPa is partially oxidized to NiO. The NiO phase dominates at higher Pox.


Pox also affects the deposition rate of TLE-grown oxide films 62. FIG. 33 shows the pressure dependence of the deposition rates of Ti- and Ni-based oxide films 62. Considering the oxygen incorporation into the film 62, we would expect an increasing deposition rate with increasing Pox. However, the observed deposition rate behavior cannot be explained only by oxygen incorporation alone. The growth rate of the Ti-based films 62 increases with Pox from ˜0.6 Å/s at base pressure to 3.5 Å/s at 10−3 hPa. A six-fold increase in deposition rate infers that there are other factors affecting the rate. In contrast, the deposition rate of Ni-based oxide films 62 increases only from 3.1 to 4.6 Å/s at 10−4 hPa, then drops drastically to 0.3 Å/s for Pox>10−4 hPa. An increase of the oxide fraction in the film 62 (see FIG. 32) may be responsible for the initial increase of deposition rate, but cannot explain the huge decrease of deposition rate at 10−3 hPa. The growth properties of Ti- and Ni-based films 62 represent two characteristic modes observed for most of the films 62. Fe, Co, Nb, Zn, and Mo show the behavior of Ti, whereas Cr, Sc, Mn, and V show that of Ni.


Why does Pox alter the deposition rate of oxide films grown by TLE in these two rather characteristic ways? We suggest that this behavior is controlled by the vapor pressure of the source's 30, 32 oxidized surface layer. The deposition rate increases with Pox if the vapor pressure of the oxide formed at the source surface exceeds that of the metal. This corresponds to the Ti-like deposition rate behavior. Formation of TiO2 gas vapor, Ti(s)+O2(g)→TiO2(g), is an exothermic reaction leading to effective generation of oxide vapor from the source. As the metal oxidation rate increases with a power of Pox (oxidation rate ∝Poxn), the deposition rate will increase correspondingly with Pox, as observed for Fe and Nb. In contrast, the Ni-like scenario is found if the vapor pressure of the metal exceeds that of the oxide. As the vapor pressure of NiO is about one order of magnitude smaller than that of Ni, a NiO coverage of a source reduces the deposition rate by the same factor. This understanding is supported by the observation that the abrupt decrease of the deposition rate of Ni occurs at 10−3 hPa, the same pressure at which the pressure drop in the chamber disappears, revealing that the source is passivated by a NiO layer 62 at this Pox.


The growth of polycrystalline oxide films 62 by TLE has thus been demonstrated. The films 62 having tunable oxidation states and a crystal structure can be grown by evaporating pure metal sources in oxygen-ozone pressures of up to 101 hPa, irrespective of possible oxidation of the sources 30, 32. From a wide range of metal sources comprising low and high-vapor-pressure elements, polycrystalline films 62 in various oxidation states were deposited with growth rates of several Å/s on unheated Si (100) substrates 24. Determining the degree of source oxidation, the pressure of the oxidizing gas strongly affects the deposition rate as well as the composition and phase of the resulting oxide films 32. Our work paves the way to TLE growth of epitaxial oxide heterostructures of ultrahigh purity for diverse compounds.









TABLE 1







List of the oxide thin films deposited by TLE in this work.










Elemental source
Film







Sc
Sc2O3



Ti
TiO, TiO2*



V
V2O3, VO2, V2O5



Cr
Cr2O3**



Mn
MnO



Fe
Fe3O4



Co
Co3O4



Ni
NiO



Cu
CuO



Zn
ZnO



Zr
ZrO2



Nb
Nb2O5



Mo
Mo4O11, MoO3



Hf
HfO2



Ru
RuO2







*Both anatase and rutile phases were observed.



**Film was annealed at 500° C. for 2 hours in Ar ambient.






LIST OF REFERENCE NUMERALS






    • 10 reaction chamber


    • 12 vacuum chamber


    • 14 first reaction volume


    • 16 second reaction volume


    • 18 vacuum pump


    • 20 gas supply


    • 22 substrate arrangement


    • 24 substrate


    • 26 substrate heating laser


    • 28 substrate holder transfer


    • 30 first source


    • 32 second source


    • 34 source arrangement


    • 36 first source heating laser


    • 38 second source heating laser


    • 40 shielding aperture


    • 42 source holder transfer


    • 44 gate valve


    • 46 substrate holder


    • 48 substrate surface of 24


    • 50 backside of 24


    • 52 window


    • 54 first element, molecule, formula unit


    • 56 second element, molecule, formula unit


    • 58 terrace


    • 60 surface


    • 62 thin film, layer


    • 66 edges


    • 100 solid-state component


    • 102 quantum component


    • 104 first electromagnetic radiation


    • 106 second electromagnetic radiation


    • 108 third electromagnetic radiation


    • 110 fourth electromagnetic radiation


    • 112 fifth electromagnetic radiation


    • 114 component beam


    • 116 first reaction atmosphere


    • 118 second reaction atmosphere


    • 120 third reaction atmosphere


    • 122 fourth reaction atmosphere


    • 124 fifth reaction atmosphere


    • 126 first material


    • 128 second material


    • 130 third material


    • 132 buffer material


    • 134 buffer layer


    • 136 cover material


    • 138 cover layer

    • G process gas

    • T Termination material




Claims
  • 1-23. (canceled)
  • 24. A method of preparing a surface of a single crystal wafer as an epitaxial template, the surface comprising surface atoms and/or surface molecules, the single crystal wafer comprising a single crystal composed of two or more elements and/or two or more molecules as substrate constituents, each element and molecule respectively having a sublimation rate, the method comprising the steps of: providing a single crystal wafer substrate with a defined miscut angle and direction;heating the substrate to a temperature at which the surface atoms and/or the surface molecules can reconstruct and/or migrate along the surface to form an arrangement with a minimal step density and step edges oriented according to the predefined miscut angle and miscut direction;heating the substrate to a temperature at which atoms or molecules of the substrate constituent having the highest sublimation rate may leave the surface.
  • 25. Method according to claim 24, wherein the sublimation rates of the two or more elements and/or two or more molecules at a given temperature differ from one another.
  • 26. Method according to claim 24, wherein a sublimation temperature of the two or more elements and/or two or more molecules differs by at least 2° C.
  • 27. Method according to claim 24, wherein the step of heating the single crystal wafer comprises two heating components:a first component of heating the single crystal wafer at a surface disposed remote from the surface to be treated.
  • 28. Method according to claim 27, wherein the second component of heating is provided to a source to irradiate the surface to be treated with a flux of the most volatile constituent of the surface material.
  • 29. Method according to claim 28, wherein the flux is selected lower than the sublimation rate of the same element from the surface at the chosen substrate temperature.
  • 30. Method according to claim 28, wherein an intensity of flux is selected to provide an equilibrium between the number of atoms or molecules reaching the substrate surface and the number of atoms or molecules leaving the surface.
  • 31. Method according to claim 24, wherein the sublimation temperature is a temperature greater than 950° C.
  • 32. Method according to claim 24, wherein one of several energetically equivalent in-plane surface reconstruction unit cells is selected by defining the miscut direction.
  • 33. Method according to claim 24, wherein the two or more elements and/or two or more molecules of the crystal are selected from the group of members consisting of: Si, C, Ge, As, Al, O, N, O, Mg, Nd, Ga, Ti, La, Sr, Ta and combinations of the foregoing.
  • 34. Method according to claim 24, wherein the step of heating is carried out by one or more lasers.
  • 35. Method according to claim 24, wherein the step of heating is carried out in a vacuum atmosphere selected in the range of 10−8 to 10−12 hPa.
  • 36. Method according to claim 24, wherein the step of cutting is carried out by mechanical cutting.
  • 37. Method according to claim 24, wherein the step of cutting the single crystal wafer from a bulk substrate is carried out by cutting the single crystal wafer from the bulk substrate of the single crystal by cutting the surface in a cutting plane that is different from the plane of the crystal of the bulk substrate.
  • 38. Method according to claim 37, wherein the single crystal wafer is cut from the bulk substrate by cutting the surface in a cutting plane that is inclined with respect to the central axis of the bulk substrate by 0.01 to 0.1°.
  • 39. A method of forming a device comprising the provision of a single crystal wafer treated by a method according to claim 24 and depositing a further layer on said surface.
  • 40. Method according to claim 39, wherein the layer comprises a member selected from the group of members consisting of: metal, oxides, nitrides, hydrides, fluorides, chlorides, bromides, iodides, phosphides, sulphides, selenides, mercury based compounds and combinations of the foregoing.
  • 41. Method according to claim 39, wherein the further layer is deposited as a single layer.
  • 42. Method according to claim 39, wherein the step of heating is carried out in the same chamber as the step of depositing a further layer on said surface.
  • 43. An epitaxial template obtainable by a method according to claim 24.
  • 44. A device comprising a layer structure having an epitaxial template according to claim 43, and one or more layers grown on said epitaxial template.
  • 45. A device according to claim 44, wherein one of the one or more layers has qubit relaxation times and qubit coherence times above 100 μs.
  • 46. A device obtainable by a method according to claim 39.
PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind
PCT/EP2021/068243 7/1/2021 WO