Affiliation: | aThe George Washington University, School of Engineering and Applied Science, 725 23RD St N.W. Washington, DC 20052, USA bNaval Research Laboratory, 4555 Overlook Ave., Washington DC, 20375, USA cSFA Inc., 2200 Defense Highway, Suite 405, Crofton, MD 21114, USA |
Abstract: | The microwave dielectric properties of Ba0.6Sr0.4TiO3 1 mol% W-doped thin films deposited using pulsed laser deposition, are improved by a novel oxygen deposition profile. The thin films were deposited onto (001) MgO substrates at a temperature of 720 °C. A comparison is made between three different oxygen ambient growth conditions. These include growth at a single oxygen pressure (6.7 Pa) and growth at two oxygen pressures, one low (6.7 Pa) and one high (46.7 Pa). Films were deposited in a sequence that includes both a low to high and a high to low transition in the oxygen deposition pressure. Following deposition, all films were post-annealed in 1 atm of oxygen at 1000 °C for 6 h. The dielectric Q (defined as 1 / tanδ) and the dielectric constant, εr, were measured at room temperature, at 2 GHz, using gap capacitors fabricated on top of the dielectric films. The percent dielectric tuning (defined as (εr(0 V) − εr(40 V)) / εr(0 V) × 100) and figure of merit (FOM) (defined as percent dielectric tuning × Q(0 V)) were calculated. The film deposited using the two-stage growth conditions, 6.7 / 46.7 Pa oxygen, showed a maximum Q(0 V) value with high percent dielectric tuning and gave rise to a microwave FOM twice as large as the single stage growth condition. The improved dielectric properties are due to initial formation of a film with reduced interfacial strain, due to the formation of defects at the film/ substrate interface resulting in a high Q(0 V) value, followed by the reduction of oxygen vacancies which increases the dielectric constant and tuning. |