APL Materials (Jun 2023)

Picosecond magneto-optic thermometry measurements of nanoscale thermal transport in AlN thin films

  • Frank Angeles,
  • Samreen Khan,
  • Victor H. Ortiz,
  • Mingfei Xu,
  • Shisong Luo,
  • Dinusha Herath Mudiyanselage,
  • Houqiang Fu,
  • Yuji Zhao,
  • Richard B. Wilson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0149651
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 6
pp. 061127 – 061127-9

Abstract

Read online

The thermal conductivity Λ of wide bandgap semiconductor thin films, such as AlN, affects the performance of high-frequency devices, power devices, and optoelectronics. However, accurate measurements of Λ in thin films with sub-micrometer thicknesses and Λ > 100 W m−1 K−1 is challenging. Widely used pump/probe metrologies, such as time–domain thermoreflectance (TDTR) and frequency–domain thermoreflectance, lack the spatiotemporal resolution necessary to accurately quantify thermal properties of sub-micrometer thin films with high Λ. In this work, we use a combination of magneto-optic thermometry and TiN interfacial layers to significantly enhance the spatiotemporal resolution of pump/probe thermal transport measurements. We use our approach to measure Λ of 100, 400, and 1000 nm AlN thin films. We coat AlN thin films with a ferromagnetic thin-film transducer with the geometry of (1 nm-Pt/0.4 nm-Co)x3/(2 nm-TiN). This PtCo/TiN transducer has a fast thermal response time of <50 ps, which allows us to differentiate between the thermal response of the transducer, AlN thin film, and substrate. For the 100, 400, and 1000 nm thick AlN films, we determine Λ to be 200 ± 80, 165 ± 35, and 300 ± 70 W m−1 K−1, respectively. We conclude with an uncertainty analysis that quantifies the errors associated with pump/probe measurements of thermal conductivity, as a function of transducer type, thin-film thermal conductivity, and thin-film thickness. Time resolved magneto-optic Kerr effect experiments can measure films that are three to five times thinner than is possible with standard pump/probe metrologies, such as TDTR. This advance in metrology will enable better characterization of nanoscale heat transfer in high thermal conductivity material systems like wide bandgap semiconductor heterostructures and devices.