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Zeitschriftenartikel:

F. Porrati, S. Barth, R. Sachser, O. Dobrovolskiy, A. Seybert, A. Frangakis, M. Huth:
"Crystalline niobium carbide superconducting nanowires prepared by focused ion beam direct writing";
ACS Nano, 13 (2019), S. 6287 - 6296.



Kurzfassung englisch:
Superconducting planar nanostructures are widely used in applications, e.g., for highly sensitive magnetometers and in basic research, e.g., to study finite size effects or vortex dynamics. In contrast, 3D superconducting nanostructures, despite their potential in quantum information processing and nanoelectronics, have been addressed only in a few pioneering experiments. This is due to the complexity of fabricating 3D nanostructures by conventional
techniques such as electron-beam lithography and to the scarce number of superconducting materials available for direct-writing techniques, which enable the growth of 3D free-standing nanostructures. Here, we present a comparative
study of planar nanowires and free-standing 3D nanowires fabricated by focused electron- and ion (Ga+)-beam induced deposition (FEBID and FIBID) using the precursor Nb(NMe2)3(N-t-Bu). FEBID nanowires contain about 67 atomic percent C, 22 atomic percent N, and 11 atomic percent Nb, while FIBID samples are composed of 43 atomic percent C, 13 atomic percent N, 15.5 atomic percent Ga, and 28.5 atomic percent Nb. Transmission electron microscopy shows that FEBID samples are amorphous, while FIBID samples exhibit a fcc NbC polycrystalline structure, with grains about 15−20 nm in diameter. Electrical transport measurements show that FEBID nanowires are highly resistive following a variable-range-hopping behavior. In contradistinction, FIBID planar nanowires become superconducting at Tc ≈ 5 K. In addition, the critical temperature of free-standing 3D nanowires is as high as Tc ≈ 11 K, which is close to the value of bulk NbC. In conclusion, FIBID-NbC is a promising material for the fabrication of superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors (SNSPD) and for the development of 3D superconductivity with applications in quantum information processing and nanoelectronics.

Schlagworte:
niobium carbide, superconducting nanowires, direct writing, 3D nanoprinting, focused electron and ion beam induced deposition


"Offizielle" elektronische Version der Publikation (entsprechend ihrem Digital Object Identifier - DOI)
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.9b00059


Erstellt aus der Publikationsdatenbank der Technischen Universität Wien.