Vodolazov, D. Y., Manova, N. N., Korneeva, Y. P., & Korneev, A. A. (2020). Timing jitter in NbN superconducting microstrip single-photon detector. Phys. Rev. Applied, 14(4), 044041 (1 to 8).
Abstract: We experimentally study timing jitter of single-photon detection by NbN superconducting strips with width w ranging from 190 nm to 3μm. We find that timing jitter of both narrow (190 nm) and micron-wide strips is about 40 ps at currents where internal detection efficiency η saturates and it is close to our instrumental jitter. We also calculate intrinsic timing jitter in wide strips using the modified time-dependent Ginzburg-Landau equation coupled with a two-temperature model. We find that with increasing width the intrinsic timing jitter increases and the effect is most considerable at currents where a rapid growth of η changes to saturation. We relate it with complicated vortex and antivortex dynamics, which depends on a photon’s absorption site across the strip and its width. The model also predicts that at current close to depairing current the intrinsic timing jitter of a wide strip could be about ℏ/kBTc (Tc is a critical temperature of superconductor), i.e., the same as for a narrow strip.
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Shein, K. V., Zarudneva, A. A., Emel’yanova, V. O., Logunova, M. A., Chichkov, V. I., Sobolev, A. S., et al. (2020). Superconducting microstructures with high impedance. Phys. Solid State, 62(9), 1539–1542.
Abstract: The transport properties of two types of quasi-one-dimensional superconducting microstructures were investigated at ultra-low temperatures: the narrow channels close-packed in the shape of meander, and the chains of tunneling contacts “superconductor-insulator-superconductor.” Both types of the microstructures demonstrated high value of high-frequency impedance and-or the dynamic resistance. The study opens up potential for using of such structures as current stabilizing elements with zero dissipation.
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Korneeva, Y. P., Manova, N. N., Florya, I. N., Mikhailov, M. Y., Dobrovolskiy, O. V., Korneev, A. A., et al. (2020). Different single-photon response of wide and narrow superconducting MoxSi1−x strips. Phys. Rev. Applied, 13(2), 024011 (1 to 7).
Abstract: The photon count rate (PCR) of superconducting single-photon detectors made of MoxSi1−x films shaped as a 2-μm-wide strip and a 115-nm-wide meander strip line is studied experimentally as a function of the dc biasing current at different values of the perpendicular magnetic field. For the wide strip, a crossover current Icross is observed, below which the PCR increases with an increasing magnetic field and above which it decreases. This behavior contrasts with the narrow MoxSi1−x meander, for which no crossover current is observed, thus suggesting different photon-detection mechanisms in the wide and narrow strips. Namely, we argue that in the wide strip the absorbed photon destroys superconductivity locally via the vortex-antivortex mechanism for the emergence of resistance, while in the narrow meander superconductivity is destroyed across the whole strip line, forming a hot belt. Accordingly, the different photon-detection mechanisms associated with vortices and the hot belt determine the qualitative difference in the dependence of the PCR on the magnetic field.
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Manova, N. N., Smirnov, E. O., Korneeva, Y. P., Korneev, A. A., & Goltsman, G. N. (2019). Superconducting photon counter for nanophotonics applications. In J. Phys.: Conf. Ser. (Vol. 1410, 012147 (1 to 5)).
Abstract: We develop large area superconducting single-photon detector SSPD with a micron-wide strip suitable for free-space coupling or packaging with multi-mode optical fibres. The detector sensitive area is 20 μm in diameter. In near infrared (1330 nm wavelength) our SSPD exhibits above 30% detection efficiency with low dark counts and 45 ps timing jitter.
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Polyakova, M. I., Florya, I. N., Semenov, A. V., Korneev, A. A., & Goltsman, G. N. (2019). Extracting hot-spot correlation length from SNSPD tomography data. In J. Phys.: Conf. Ser. (Vol. 1410, 012166 (1 to 4)).
Abstract: We present data of quantum detector tomography for the samples specifically optimized for this problem. Using this method, we take results of hot-spot correlation length of 17 ± 2 nm.
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