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Semenov, A. D., Heusinger, M. A., Renk, K. F., Menschikov, E., Sergeev, A. V., Elant'ev, A. I., et al. (1997). Influence of phonon trapping on the performance of NbN kinetic inductance detectors. IEEE Trans. Appl. Supercond., 7(2), 3083–3086.
Abstract: Voltage and microwave photoresponse of NbN thin films to modulated and pulsed optical radiation reveals, far below the superconducting transition, a response time consistent with the lifetime of nonequilibrium quasiparticles. We show that even in 5 nm thick films at 4.2 K the phonon trapping is significant resulting in a quasiparticle lifetime of a few nanoseconds that is an order of magnitude larger than the recombination time. Values and temperature dependence of the quasiparticle lifetime obey the Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer theory and are in quantitative agreement with the electron-phonon relaxation rate determined from the resistive response near the superconducting transition. We discuss a positive effect of the phonon trapping on the performance of kinetic inductance detectors.
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Semenov, A. D., Goghidze, I. G., Gol’tsman, G. N., Sergeev, A. V., & Gershenzon, E. M. (1993). Evidence for the spectral dependence of nonequilibrium picosecond photoresponse of YBaCuO thin films. Appl. Phys. Lett., 63(5), 681–683.
Abstract: The transient voltage photoresponse of current biased YBaCuO thin films to 20 ps laser pulses of 0.63 and 1.54 μm wavelengths is measured for temperatures around the superconducting transition region. The fast picosecond decay of the response is followed by a slow nanosecond relaxation which is associated with the bolometric effect. The magnitude of the fast component of the response varies in proportion to the square root of wavelength that plausibly reflects multiplication processes of photoexcited electrons via electron–electron scattering and interaction with high energy phonons.
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Semenov, A. D., Gol’tsman, G. N., Gogidze, I. G., Sergeev, A. V., Gershenzon, E. M., Lang, P. T., et al. (1992). Subnanosecond photoresponse of a YBaCuO thin film to infrared and visible radiation by quasiparticle induced suppression of superconductivity. Appl. Phys. Lett., 60(7), 903–905.
Abstract: We observed subnanosecond photoresponse of a structured superconducting YBa2Cu3O7−δ thin film to infrared and visible radiation. We measured the voltage response of a current biased film (thickness 700 Å) in a resistive state to radiation pulses. From our results we conclude a response time of about 90 ps and a responsivity of about 4×1010 Ω/J. We attribute the response to Cooper pair breaking and suppression of the superconducting energy gap induced by nonequilibrium quasiparticles.
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Gershenzon, E. M., Gol’tsman, G. N., Sergeev, A., & Semenov, A. D. (1990). Picosecond response of YBaCuO films to electromagnetic radiation. In W. Gorzkowski, M. Gutowski, A. Reich, & H. Szymczak (Eds.), Proc. European Conf. High-Tc Thin Films and Single Crystals (pp. 457–462).
Abstract: Radiation-induced change of the resistance was studied in the resistive state of YBaCuO films. Electron-phonon relaxation time T h was determmed from direct ep measurements and analysis of quasistationary electron heating. Temperature dependence of That TS 40 K was found to – ep be T h.. T'. The resul ts show that ep detectors with the response time of few picosecond at nitrogen temperature can be realized.
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Kitaygorsky, J., Zhang, J., Verevkin, A., Sergeev, A., Korneev, A., Matvienko, V., et al. (2005). Origin of dark counts in nanostructured NbN single-photon detectors. IEEE Trans. Appl. Supercond., 15(2), 545–548.
Abstract: We present our study of dark counts in ultrathin (3.5 to 10 nm thick), narrow (120 to 170 nm wide) NbN superconducting stripes of different lengths. In experiments, where the stripe was completely isolated from the outside world and kept at temperature below the critical temperature Tc, we detected subnanosecond electrical pulses associated with the spontaneous appearance of the temporal resistive state. The resistive state manifested itself as generation of phase-slip centers (PSCs) in our two-dimensional superconducting stripes. Our analysis shows that not far from Tc, PSCs have a thermally activated nature. At lowest temperatures, far below Tc, they are created by quantum fluctuations.
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