Hydrogenated Amorphous Silicon Carbide: A Low-loss Deposited Dielectric for Microwave to Submillimeter Wave Superconducting Circuits (2110.03500v1)
Abstract: Low-loss deposited dielectrics will benefit superconducting devices such as integrated superconducting spectrometers, superconducting qubits and kinetic inductance parametric amplifiers. Compared with planar structures, multi-layer structures such as microstrips are more compact and eliminate radiation loss at high frequencies. Multi-layer structures are most easily fabricated with deposited dielectrics, which typically exhibit higher dielectric loss than crystalline dielectrics. We measured the sub-kelvin and low-power microwave and mm-submm wave dielectric loss of hydrogenated amorphous silicon carbide (a-SiC:H), using a superconducting chip with NbTiN/a-SiC:H/NbTiN microstrip resonators. We deposited the a-SiC:H by plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition at a substrate temperature of 400{\deg}C. The a-SiC:H has a mm-submm loss tangent ranging from $0.80 \pm 0.01 \times 10{-4}$ to $1.43 \pm 0.04 \times 10{-4}$ in the range of 270 to 385 GHz. The microwave loss tangent is $3.2 \pm 0.2 \times 10{-5}$. These are the lowest low-power sub-kelvin loss tangents that have been reported for microstrip resonators at mm-submm and microwave frequencies. We observe that the loss tangent increases with frequency. The a-SiC:H films are free of blisters and have low stress: $-$20 MPa compressive at 200 nm thickness to 60 MPa tensile at 1000 nm thickness.
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.