Scaling growth rates for perovskite oxide virtual substrates on silicon

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Abstract

The availability of native substrates is a cornerstone in the development of microelectronic technologies relying on epitaxial films. If native substrates are not available, virtual substrates - crystalline buffer layers epitaxially grown on a structurally dissimilar substrate - offer a solution. Realizing commercially viable virtual substrates requires the growth of high-quality films at high growth rates for large-scale production. We report the stoichiometric growth of SrTiO3 exceeding 600 nm hr−1. This tenfold increase in growth rate compared to SrTiO3 grown on silicon by conventional methods is enabled by a self-regulated growth window accessible in hybrid molecular beam epitaxy. Overcoming the materials integration challenge for complex oxides on silicon using virtual substrates opens a path to develop new electronic devices in the More than Moore era and silicon integrated quantum computation hardware.

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Lapano, J., Brahlek, M., Zhang, L., Roth, J., Pogrebnyakov, A., & Engel-Herbert, R. (2019). Scaling growth rates for perovskite oxide virtual substrates on silicon. Nature Communications, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-10273-2

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