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      Nanosecond Laser Annealing: impact on superconducting Silicon on Insulator epilayers

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          Abstract

          We present superconducting monocrystalline Silicon On Insulator thin 33 nm epilayers. They are obtained by nanosecond laser annealing under ultra-high vacuum on 300 mm wafers heavily pre-implantated with boron (\(2.5\times \,10^{16}\, at/cm^2\), 3 keV). Superconductivity is discussed in relation to the structural, electrical and material properties, a step towards the integration of ultra-doped superconducting Si at large scale. In particular, we highlight the effect of the nanosecond laser annealing energy and the impact of multiple laser anneals. Increasing the energy leads to a linear increase of the layer thickness, and to the increase of the superconducting critical temperature \(T_c\) from zero (\(<35\, mK\)) to \(0.5\,K\). This value is comparable to superconducting Si layers realised by Gas Immersion Laser Doping where the dopants are incorporated without introducing the deep defects associated to implantation. Superconductivity only appears when the annealed depth is larger than the initial amorphous layer induced by the boron implantation. The number of subsequent anneals results in a more homogeneous doping with reduced amount of structural defects and increased conductivity. The quantitative analysis of \(T_c\) concludes on a superconducting/ non superconducting bilayer, with an extremely low resistance interface. This highlights the possibility to couple efficiently superconducting Si to Si channels.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          25 June 2024
          Article
          2406.17511
          6e24666f-87c7-475e-8cc1-ea66f5877819

          http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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          Custom metadata
          cond-mat.supr-con cond-mat.mtrl-sci

          Condensed matter
          Condensed matter

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