Low temperature (Ts/Tm < 0.1) epitaxial growth of HfN/MgO(001) via reactive HiPIMS with metal-ion synchronized substrate bias
Michelle Marie S. Villamayor, Julien Keraudy, Tetsuhide Shimizu,, Rommel Paulo B. Viloan, Robert Boyd, Daniel Lundin, J.E. Greene, Ivan, Petrova, Ulf Helmersson

TL;DR
This study demonstrates low-temperature epitaxial growth of HfN thin films on MgO(001) using reactive HiPIMS with synchronized substrate bias, achieving high-quality films with properties comparable to high-temperature growth.
Contribution
It introduces a novel low-temperature epitaxial growth method for HfN using reactive HiPIMS with metal-ion synchronized bias, reducing inert gas incorporation and improving film quality.
Findings
Epitaxial HfN films exhibit cube-on-cube orientation with MgO(001).
Synchronized bias reduces mosaicity and inert gas trapping.
Films achieve high hardness comparable to high-temperature grown layers.
Abstract
Low-temperature epitaxial growth of refractory transition-metal nitride thin films by means of physical vapor deposition has been a recurring theme in advanced thin-film technology for several years. In the present study, 150-nm-thick epitaxial HfN layers are grown on MgO(001) by reactive high-impulse magnetron sputtering (HiPIMS) with no external substrate heating. Maximum film growth temperatures Ts due to plasma heating range from 70-150 {\deg}C, corresponding to Ts/Tm = 0.10-0.12 (in which Tm is the HfN melting point in K). During HiPIMS, gas and sputtered-metal ion fluxes incident at the growing film surface are separated in time due to strong gas rarefaction and the transition to a metal-ion dominated plasma. In the present experiments, a negative bias of 100 V is applied to the substrate, either continuously during the entire deposition or synchronized with the metal-rich portion…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsMetal and Thin Film Mechanics · Semiconductor materials and devices · GaN-based semiconductor devices and materials
