Feofanov, A. K., Oboznov, V. A., Bol'Ginov, V. V., Lisenfeld, J., Poletto, S., Ryazanov, V. V., et al. (2010). Implementation of superconductor/ferromagnet/ superconductor. Nat. Phys., 6(8), 593–597.
Abstract: High operation speed and low energy consumption may allow the superconducting digital single-flux-quantum circuits to outperform traditional complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor logic. The remaining major obstacle towards high element densities on-chip is a relatively large cell size necessary to hold a magnetic flux quantum Φ0. Inserting a π-type Josephson junction in the cell is equivalent to applying flux Φ0/2 and thus makes it possible to solve this problem. Moreover, using π-junctions in superconducting qubits may help to protect them from noise. Here we demonstrate the operation of three superconducting circuits-two of them are classical and one quantum-that all utilize such π-phase shifters realized using superconductor/ferromagnet/superconductor sandwich technology. The classical circuits are based on single-flux-quantum cells, which are shown to be scalable and compatible with conventional niobium-based superconducting electronics. The quantum circuit is a π-biased phase qubit, for which we observe coherent Rabi oscillations. We find no degradation of the measured coherence time compared to that of a reference qubit without a π-junction.
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Shitov, S. V., Levitchev, M., Veretennikov, A. V., Koshelets, V. P., Prokopenko, G. V., Filippenko, L. V., et al. (2001). Superconducting integrated receiver as 400-600 GHz tester for coolable devices. IEEE Trans. Appl. Supercond., 11(1), 832–835.
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Averkin, A. S., Shishkin, A. G., Chichkov, V. I., Voronov, B. M., Goltsman, G. N., Karpov, A., et al. (2014). Tunable frequency-selective surface based on superconducting split-ring resonators. In 8th Metamaterials.
Abstract: We study a possibility to use the 2D superconducting metamaterial as a tunable frequency-selective surface (FSS). The proposed FSS is made of sub-wavelength size (l/14) metamaterial unit cells, where a split-ring resonator is embedded in a small iris aperture in a metal plane. The split-ring resonator is made of NbN film, and its resonance frequency is tuned by the temperature of the sample, changing the kinetic inductance of NbN film. The Ansoft HFSS simulation predicts the FSS tuning range of about 10-20 %. The developed superconducting FSS may be used as a tunable band-pass filter or modulator.
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