Composition dependence of second harmonic generation, refractive index, extinction coefficient, and optical bandgap in 20 nm thick crystalline Hf1-xZrxO2 (0 ≤ x ≤ 1) thin films is reported. The refractive index exhibits a general increase with increasing ZrO2 content with all values within the range of 1.98-2.14 from 880 nm to 400 nm wavelengths. A composition dependence of the indirect optical bandgap is observed, decreasing from 5.81 eV for HfO2 to 5.17 eV for Hf0.4Zr0.6O2. The bandgap increases for compositions with x > 0.6, reaching 5.31 eV for Hf0.1Zr0.9O2. Second harmonic signals are measured for 880 nm incident light. The magnitude of the second harmonic signal scales with the magnitude of the remanant polarization in the composition series. Film compositions that display near zero remanent polarizations exhibit minimal second harmonic generation while those with maximum remanent polarization also display the largest second harmonic signal. The results are discussed in the context of ferroelectric phase assemblage in the hafnium zirconium oxide films and demonstrate a path toward a silicon-compatible integrated nonlinear optical material.
Ferroelectricity in doped and alloyed hafnia thin films has been demonstrated using several different electrodes, with TiN and TaN being most prominent. In this work, we demonstrate ferroelectric Hf0.58Zr0.42O2 thin films with superconducting NbN electrodes at cryogenic temperatures. Demonstration of polarization - electric field [P(E)] response at liquid helium cryogenic temperatures, 4 K, suggests that the polarization is switchable over a wide temperature range after an initial 600 °C anneal. Further, room temperature P(E) and capacitance measurements demonstrate an expected polarization response with wake-up required to reach the steady state. Wake-up cycling at 4 K is observed to have no effect upon the ferroelectric phase suggesting an oxygen vacancy mobility freeze out whereas wake-up cycling at 294 K demonstrates close to a 3× increase in remanent polarization. This integration of a ferroelectric Hf0.58Zr0.42O2 thin film with NbN demonstrates the suitability of a highly scalable ferroelectric in applications for cryogenic technologies.
Exposure to chemicals in everyday life is now more prevalent than ever. Air and water pollution can be delivery mechanisms for toxins, carcinogens, and other chemicals of interest (COI). A compact, multiplexed, chemical sensor with high responsivity and selectivity is desperately needed. We demonstrate the integration of unique Zr-based metal organic frameworks (MOFs) with a plasmonic transducer to demonstrate a nanoscale optical sensor that is both highly sensitive and selective to the presence of COI. MOFs are a product of coordination chemistry where a central ion is surrounded by a group of ligands resulting in a thin-film with nano-to micro-porosity, ultra-high surface area, and precise structural tunability. These properties make MOFs an ideal candidate for gaseous chemical sensing, however, transduction of a signal which probes changes in MOF films has been difficult. Plasmonic sensors have performed well in many sensing environments, but have had limited success detecting gaseous chemical analytes at low levels. This is due, in part, to the volume of molecules required to interact with the functionalized surface and produce a detectable shift in plasmonic resonance frequency. The fusion of a highly porous thin-film layer with an efficient plasmonic transduction platform is investigated and summarized. We will discuss the integration and characterization of the MOF/plasmonic sensor and summarize our results which show, upon exposure to COI, small changes in optical characteristics of the MOF layer are effectively transduced by observing shifts in plasmonic resonance.
In most models of vacuum breakdown, there is some initial emission of electrons from the cathodic surface, usually employing some form of Fowler-Nordheim emission. While this may be correct for 'textbook' surfaces, it is generally unreliable for real surfaces and fitted parameters are often used. For example, the beta employed is generally unphysical based on usual definitions (e.g., it incorporates more, but unexplained, physics than just a geometry-based field concentration effect). In this work, we describe experimental efforts to better characterize which surface structure parameters influence the vacuum field emission current.
Scott, Ethan A.; Smith, Sean S.; Henry, M.D.; Rost, Christina M.; Giri, Ashutosh; Gaskins, John T.; Fields, Shelby S.; Jaszewski, Samantha T.; Ihlefeld, Jon F.; Hopkins, Patrick E.
We report on the thermal resistances of thin films (20 nm) of hafnium zirconium oxide (Hf1-xZrxO2) with compositions ranging from 0 ≤ x ≤ 1. Measurements were made via time-domain thermoreflectance and analyzed to determine the effective thermal resistance of the films in addition to their associated thermal boundary resistances. We find effective thermal resistances ranging from 28.79 to 24.72 m2 K GW-1 for amorphous films, which decreased to 15.81 m2 K GW-1 upon crystallization. Furthermore, we analyze the heat capacity for two compositions, x = 0.5 and x = 0.7, of Hf1-xZrxO2 and find them to be 2.18 ± 0.56 and 2.64 ± 0.53 MJ m-3K-1, respectively.
In this study, the scaling of polarization and pyroelectric response across a thickness series (5–20 nm) of Hf0.58Zr0.42O2 films with TaN electrodes was characterized. Reduction in thickness from 20 nm to 5 nm resulted in a decreased remanent polarization from 17 to 2.8 μC cm-2. Accompanying the decreased remanent polarization was an increased absolute pyroelectric coefficient, from 30 to 58 μC m-2 K-1. The pyroelectric response of the 5 nm film was unstable and decreased logarithmically with time, while that of 10 nm and thicker films was stable over a time scale of >300 h at room temperature. Finally, the sign of the pyroelectric response was irreversible with differing polarity of poling bias for the 5 nm thick film, indicating that the enhanced pyroelectric response was of electret origins, whereas the pyroelectric response in thicker films was consistent with a crystallographic origin.
We report on the fabrication and characterization of nanocrystalline ZnO films for use as a random laser physical unclonable function (PUF). Correlation between processing conditions and film microstructure will be made to optimize the lasing properties and random response. We will specifically examine the repeatability and security of PUFs demonstrated in this novel 3 system. This demonstration has promise to impact many of Sandia's core missions including counterfeit detection. 4 4
Considering the power constrained scaling of silicon complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor technology, the use of high mobility III-V compound semiconductors such as In0.53Ga0.47As in conjunction with high-κ dielectrics is becoming a promising option for future n-type metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect-transistors. Development of low dissipation field-effect tunable III-V based photonic devices integrated with high-κ dielectrics is therefore very appealing from a technological perspective. In this work, we present an experimental realization of a monolithically integrable, field-effect-tunable, III-V hybrid metasurface operating at long-wave-infrared spectral bands. Our device relies on strong light-matter coupling between epsilon-near-zero (ENZ) modes of an ultra-thin In0.53Ga0.47As layer and the dipole resonances of a complementary plasmonic metasurface. The tuning mechanism of our device is based on field-effect modulation, where we modulate the coupling between the ENZ mode and the metasurface by modifying the carrier density in the ENZ layer using an external bias voltage. Modulating the bias voltage between ±2 V, we deplete and accumulate carriers in the ENZ layer, which result in spectrally tuning the eigenfrequency of the upper polariton branch at 13 μm by 480 nm and modulating the reflectance by 15%, all with leakage current densities less than 1 μA/cm2. Our wavelength scalable approach demonstrates the possibility of designing on-chip voltage-tunable filters compatible with III-V based focal plane arrays at mid- and long-wave-infrared wavelengths.
Pyroelectric coefficients were measured for 20 nm thick crystalline hafnium zirconium oxide (Hf1-xZrxO2) thin films across a composition range of 0 ≤ x ≤ 1. Pyroelectric currents were collected near room temperature under zero applied bias and a sinusoidal oscillating temperature profile to separate the influence of non-pyroelectric currents. The pyroelectric coefficient was observed to correlate with zirconium content, increased orthorhombic/tetragonal phase content, and maximum polarization response. The largest measured absolute value was 48 μCm−2 K−1 for a composition with x = 0.64, while no pyroelectric response was measured for compositions which displayed no remanent polarization (x = 0, 0.91, and 1).