Talk

EPITAXIAL GROWTH OF THE TOPOLOGICAL SEMIMETAL PtAl

Abstract

This collaborative research project explores the promise of a new compound conductor PtAl for narrow high conductivity interconnects. PtAl is a topological semimetal with a cubic chiral structure with the P21_13 space group. It is theoretically predicted to exhibit topologically protected surface states which lead to scattering-free electron conduction, resulting in an inverted resistivity size effect at small dimensions.

PtAl thin films are deposited by ultra-high vacuum magnetron sputtering onto Al2_2O3_3(0001), Al2_2O3_3(11 ̅02), Al2_2O3_3(112 ̅0) and MgO(001) substrates at Ts_s = 400-1000 °C. Growth on Al2_2O3_3(11 ̅02) at Ts = 1000 °C leads to epitaxial PtAl(001) layers with a resistivity ρ\rho that decreases from 115 - 67 μΩ\mu\Omega·cm with increasing thickness dd = 13 – 109 nm. The resistivity also decreases for deviations from stoichiometry which lead to Pt5_5Al3_3 and Pt2_2Al3_3 impurity phases for Pt and Al rich conditions, respectively. PtAl deposition at Ts_s = 700 °C leads to a thickness-dependent crystalline orientation, with predominantly PtAl 001 layers for dd\geq 26 nm but PtAl 210 orientation for dd\geq 13 nm, and a decreasing ρ\rho = 140 – 92 μΩ\mu\Omega·cm for dd = 13 – 57 nm. InsituIn situ vacuum annealing at 850 °C of layers deposited at 400 °C causes a transition from 210 to 001 oriented films with a measured ρ\rho = 220 μΩ\mu\Omega·cm for dd = 3 nm.