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Research PaperResearchia:202601.09f8e842

Cross-hatch strain effects on SiGe quantum dots for qubit variability estimation

Luis Fabián Peña

Abstract

SiGe heterostructures integrated with Si via virtual substrate (VS) growth are promising hosts for spin qubits. While VS growth targets plastic relaxation, residual cross-hatch strain inhomogeneity propagates into heterostructure overgrowth. To quantify strain inhomogeneity's influence on interface structure and qubit properties, we measure strained-silicon (s-Si)/Si$_{0.7}$Ge$_{0.3}$ heterostructures on 25 wafers processed via standard commercial chemical vapor deposition. Spatially-aligned ima...

Submitted: January 9, 2026Subjects: Materials Science; Materials Science

Description / Details

SiGe heterostructures integrated with Si via virtual substrate (VS) growth are promising hosts for spin qubits. While VS growth targets plastic relaxation, residual cross-hatch strain inhomogeneity propagates into heterostructure overgrowth. To quantify strain inhomogeneity's influence on interface structure and qubit properties, we measure strained-silicon (s-Si)/Si0.7_{0.7}Ge0.3_{0.3} heterostructures on 25 wafers processed via standard commercial chemical vapor deposition. Spatially-aligned images of strain (Raman microscopy) and interface structure (atomic force microscopy and cross-sectional scanning transmission electron microscopy) reveal strain-roughness interplay. A strain-driven surface diffusion model predicts the roughness and its temperature dependence. Measured strains suggest spurious double-dot qubit detunings of 0.1 meV over 100 nm distances may result. Modeling shows that interface roughness (atomic steps), when convolved with alloy disorder, only modestly reduces valley splitting (70±\pm13 vs. 77±\pm14 μμeV on average). Our findings point to thicker VS buffer layers beneath heterostructures and lower-temperature growth (T \le 700 ^{\circ}C) to limit roughening.

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Date:
Jan 9, 2026
Topic:
Materials Science
Area:
Materials Science
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