| Literature DB >> 32429333 |
Emma Mykkänen1, Arijit Bera1, Janne S Lehtinen1, Alberto Ronzani1, Katja Kohopää1, Teresa Hönigl-Decrinis2, Rais Shaikhaidarov3,4, Sebastian E de Graaf2, Joonas Govenius1, Mika Prunnila1.
Abstract
We have used focused ion beam irradiation to progressively cause defects in annealed molybdenum silicide thin films. Without the treatment, the films are superconducting with critical temperature of about 1 K. We observe that both resistivity and critical temperature increase as the ion dose is increased. For resistivity, the increase is almost linear, whereas critical temperature changes abruptly at the smallest doses and then remains almost constant at 4 K. We believe that our results originate from amorphization of the polycrystalline molybdenum silicide films.Entities:
Keywords: focused ion beam; molybdenum silicide; superconductivity
Year: 2020 PMID: 32429333 PMCID: PMC7279340 DOI: 10.3390/nano10050950
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.076
Figure 1(a) Conceptual image of the irradiation of MoSi using focused ion beam. (b) Scanning electron micrograph showing the geometry for micrometer scale wires. (c) Scanning electron micrograph showing the geometry for nanometer scale samples. (d) Scanning electron micrographs with different FIB doses showing that surface roughness increases at doses larger than approximately 20 pC/m, but no visible effect is seen below that. We identify this dose as a threshold for significant film ablation.
Figure 2The effect of FIB dose on (a) critical temperature, (b) normal state resistivity, and (c) critical current density of the uncoated micrometer scale samples (Figure 1b). The milling caused by the FIB is taken into account in the analysis.
Figure 3Critical temperature (a) and normal state resistivity (b) as a function of FIB dose for the uncoated micrometer scale wires (orange circles, see Figure 1b), coated micrometer scale wires (blue squares, see Figure 1b) and nanometer scale samples (green diamonds, see Figure 1c). The milling caused by the FIB is taken into account in the analysis.
Figure A1(a) Large scale image of a sample. The light blue square indicates the area exposed by gallium FIB. (b) Closeup on the sample showing also the area exposed when studying effect of helium FIB (light blue square). (c) Critical temperature as a function of helium FIB dose.
Amount of molybdenium and silicon before annealing, average number of molybdenium atoms per silicon atoms in the compound, and presence or absence of protective oxide above MoSi when exposed to FIB. The proportion of molybdenum atoms to silicon atoms is calculated from the material thickness values using textbook values for density and molar mass. The thickness values are obtained from calibrated sputtering rates.
| Samples | Mo (nm) | Si (nm) | Stoichiometry | Oxide on Top |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| uncoated micrometer scale wires | 10 | 6 | 69 Mo per 31 Si | no |
| nanometer scale samples | 10 | 6 | 69 Mo per 31 Si | no |
| coated micrometer scale wires | 10 | 5 | 72 Mo per 28 Si | HSQ 20 nm |