Superconducting properties of thin film $\mathrm{Nb_{1-x}Ti_xN}$ studied via the NMR of implanted $^8$Li
Md Asaduzzaman, Ryan M. L. McFadden, Edward Thoeng, Yasmine Kalboussi, Ivana Curci, Thomas Proslier, Sarah R. Dunsiger, W. Andrew MacFarlane, Gerald D. Morris, Ruohong Li, John O. Ticknor, Robert E. Laxdal, Tobias Junginger
Published: 2025/5/20
Abstract
We report measurements of the normal-state and superconducting properties of thin-film $\mathrm{Nb_{1-x}Ti_xN}$ using $^{8}$Li $\beta$-detected nuclear magnetic resonance ($\beta$-NMR). In these experiments, radioactive $^{8}$Li$^{+}$ probes were implanted $\sim21$ nm below the surface of a $\mathrm{Nb_{1-x}Ti_xN}$(91 nm) film in $\mathrm{Nb_{0.75}Ti_{0.25}N}$(91 nm)/AlN(4 nm)/Nb and its NMR response recorded (via $^{8}$Li's $\beta$-emissions) between 4.6 K and 270 K in a 4.1 T field applied normal to its surface. Resonance measurements reveal wide, symmetric lineshapes at all temperatures, with significant additional broadening below the film's superconducting transition temperature $T_\mathrm{c}(0 \; \mathrm{T}) = 15.4 \pm 0.7$ K due to vortex lattice formation. Fits to a broadening model find a magnetic penetration depth $\lambda(0 \; \mathrm{K})= 180.57 \pm 0.30$ nm and upper critical field $B_\mathrm{c2}(0 \; \mathrm{K})= 18 \pm 4$ T, consistent with literature estimates. Spin-lattice relaxation (SLR) measurements find a Korringa response at low temperatures, with dynamic (i.e., thermally activated) contributions dominating above $\sim100$ K. Below $T_\mathrm{c}$, we observe a small Hebel-Slichter coherence peak characterized by a superconducting energy gap $\Delta(0 \; \mathrm{K}) = 2.60 \pm 0.12$ meV and modest Dynes-like broadening. Our measurements suggest a gap ratio $2\Delta(0 \; \mathrm{K})/k_\mathrm{B}T_\mathrm{c}(0 \; \mathrm{T}) = 3.92 \pm 0.25$, consistent with strong-coupling behavior. Sources for the dynamic high-$T$ relaxation are suggested.