Producing amorphous Si with high index of refraction, low thermal noise and extremely low optical absorption at infrared wavelengths
ORAL
Abstract
Amorphous Si has properties that make it attractive as a coating material for gravitational-wave detectors: high index of refraction and low mechanical loss hence low thermal noise. Its use however is currently precluded by high optical absorption in the infrared. We have shown that annealing and hydrogenation of amorphous Si (a-Si) by e-beam evaporation yields large reductions in the optical absorption of amorphous silicon films at infrared wavelengths (1064, 1550 and 2000 nm), which are of interest for gravitational-wave detectors. We have grown hydrogenated a-Si (a-Si:H) by magnetron sputtering using Ar:H mixtures from 5 to 20% H2, which leads to films with hydrogen contents below 1.5% at. H. The absorption coefficient of these films reaches values below 1 cm-1, which is a target material design for the development of gravitational-wave detectors. H reduces the dangling bond density but the reduction in absorption does not correlate with the films’ dangling bond density. Instead, H acts by reducing energy barriers between weak Si—Si bonds, eliminating structural defects and lowering the systems’ energy, which reduces the density of deep trap states and hence absorption at infrared wavelengths and the mechanical noise at all temperatures.
*Grant No. 6793 from the US National Science Foundation and the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation. Research at UCB received support from NSF Grant No. PHY-2011719 and PHY-2309290, at SU from NSF Grants No. PHY-2011571 and PHY-2011706, at CSU from NSF Grant No. PHY-2110101, and at Caltech from NSF Grants No. PHY-0823459 and PHY-1764464.
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Publication: M. Molina-Ruiz, et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 131 256902 (2023)
M. Molina-Ruiz, et al., in preparation for Phys. Rev. Mater.
Presenters
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Manel Molina-Ruiz
- University of California, Berkeley