info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Superconductivity in nanocrystalline tungsten thin films growth by sputtering in a nitrogen-argon mixture
Fecha
2019-06Registro en:
Hofer, Juan Andres; Haberkorn, Nestor Fabian; Superconductivity in nanocrystalline tungsten thin films growth by sputtering in a nitrogen-argon mixture; Elsevier Science SA; Thin Solid Films; 685; 6-2019; 117-122
0040-6090
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Hofer, Juan Andres
Haberkorn, Nestor Fabian
Resumen
We report on the structural and superconducting properties of nanocrystalline tungsten thin films growth by sputtering at room temperature with an N2:Ar mixture (N2 from 3% to 50%). The crystalline phases were identified by comparing as-grown and thermal annealed thin films. For N2/(Ar + N2) mixtures between 3 and 10%, the films display nanocrystalline β-W phase. Coexistence of β-W and W2N phases are observed for gas mixtures with N2 between 20% and 40%. A detailed study of the superconducting properties as function of the thickness was performed for W films growth with 8% N2 mixtures. For this concentration, the nitrogen atoms increase the disorder at the nanoscale reducing the grain size and avoiding the crystallization of α-W. The superconducting critical temperature (Tc = 4.7 K) is thickness independent for films thicker than ~17 nm. Below this thickness, the Tc value decreases systematically being 3.1 K for 4 nm thick films. Our study provides a simple method for the fabrication of nanocrystalline β-W thin films with potential applications in superconducting devices.