Electronic structure of the all-epitaxial NbN/GaN interface

ORAL

Abstract

The all-epitaxial integration of the NbN superconductor with Group III-Nitride direct-band-gap semiconductors by molecular beam epitaxy has created an opportunity for scalable, integrated superconductor/semiconductor devices. Paramount to our understanding of this novel hybrid system is concrete identification of the electronic structure of both materials at their interface. While the electronic structure of III-Nitrides are well-understood, the electronic structure of NbN – an important superconductor due to its large critical temperature – has only been reported theoretically, eluding experimental verification.

We present a combined experimental and theoretical study of the electronic structure of the all-epitaxial NbN/GaN interface using soft-X-ray angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy and first-principles calculations. Measuring the band structure of the NbN/GaN interface, we place the chemical potential safely in the GaN gap, with the chemical potential ~1 eV below the GaN conduction band. Using state-of-the-art first-principles theory we update the electronic structure picture of NbN, discuss its importance in the context of superconductivity in strained NbN, and its coupling to III-Nitride semiconductors.

*NSF PARADIM: DMR-1539918
ONR: N00014-20-1-2126, N00014-20-1-2176

Presenters

  • Betul Pamuk

    • Cornell University
    • School of Applied and Engineering Physics, Cornell University

Authors

  • Betul Pamuk

    • Cornell University
    • School of Applied and Engineering Physics, Cornell University
  • Tianlun Yu

    • Fudan University
    • Paul Scherrer Institut
    • State Key Laboratory of Surface Physics, Department of Physics, and Advanced Materials Laboratory, Fudan Univ
  • John G Wright

    • Cornell University
  • Guru Khalsa

    • Cornell University
  • Celesta S Chang

    • Cornell University
  • Yury Matveyev

    • DESY
  • Thorsten Schmitt

    • Paul Scherrer Institut
  • Donglai Feng

    • Fudan Univ
    • Fudan University
    • State Key Laboratory of Surface Physics, Department of Physics, and Advanced Materials Laboratory, Fudan Univ
  • David Anthony Muller

    • Cornell University
    • School of Applied and Engineering Physics, Cornell University
  • Huili Grace Xing

    • Cornell University
  • Debdeep Jena

    • Cornell University
  • Vladimir N. Strocov

    • Swiss Light Source
    • Paul Scherrer Institut