Aluminum scandium nitride films for piezoelectric transduction into silicon at gigahertz frequencies

Author:

Hackett L.1ORCID,Miller M.1ORCID,Beaucejour R.2ORCID,Nordquist C. M.1ORCID,Taylor J. C.1ORCID,Santillan S.1ORCID,Olsson R. H.3ORCID,Eichenfield M.14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Microsystems Engineering, Science, and Applications, Sandia National Laboratories 1 , Albuquerque, New Mexico 87123, USA

2. Department of Mechanical Engineering and Applied Mechanics, University of Pennsylvania 2 , Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104, USA

3. Department of Electrical and Systems Engineering, University of Pennsylvania 3 , Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104, USA

4. College of Optical Sciences, University of Arizona 4 , Tucson, Arizona 85719, USA

Abstract

Recent advances in the growth of aluminum scandium nitride films on silicon suggest that this material platform could be applied for quantum electromechanical applications. Here, we model, fabricate, and characterize microwave frequency silicon phononic delay lines with transducers formed in an adjacent aluminum scandium nitride layer to evaluate aluminum scandium nitride films, at 32% scandium, on silicon interdigital transducers for piezoelectric transduction into suspended silicon membranes. We achieve an electromechanical coupling coefficient of 2.7% for the extensional symmetric-like Lamb mode supported in the suspended material stack and show how this coupling coefficient could be increased to at least 8.5%, which would further boost transduction efficiency and reduce the device footprint. The one-sided transduction efficiency, which quantifies the efficiency at which the source of microwave photons is converted to microwave phonons in the silicon membrane, is 10% at 5 GHz at room temperature and, as we discuss, there is a path to increase this toward near-unity efficiency based on a combination of modified device design and operation at cryogenic temperatures.

Funder

National Science Foundation

U.S. Department of Energy

Publisher

AIP Publishing

Subject

Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous)

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