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High quality factor manganese-doped aluminum lumped-element kinetic inductance detectors sensitive to frequencies below 100 GHz
Aluminum lumped-element kinetic inductance detectors (LEKIDs) sensitive to millimeter-wave photons have been shown to exhibit high quality factors, making them highly sensitive and multiplexable. The superconducting gap of aluminum limits aluminum LEKIDs to photon frequencies above 100 GHz. Manganes...
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Published in: | Applied physics letters 2017-05, Vol.110 (22) |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Aluminum
lumped-element kinetic inductance
detectors (LEKIDs)
sensitive to millimeter-wave photons have been shown to exhibit high quality factors, making them
highly sensitive and multiplexable. The superconducting gap of aluminum limits aluminum LEKIDs to
photon
frequencies above 100 GHz. Manganese-doped aluminum (Al-Mn) has a tunable critical temperature and
could therefore be an attractive material for LEKIDs sensitive to frequencies below
100 GHz if the internal quality factor remains sufficiently high when manganese is added to the
film. To
investigate, we measured some of the key properties of Al-Mn LEKIDs. A prototype
eight-element LEKID array was fabricated using a 40 nm thick film of Al-Mn deposited on a
500 μm thick high-resistivity, float-zone silicon
substrate. The manganese content was 900 ppm, the measured Tc
= 694 ± 1mK, and the resonance frequencies were near 150 MHz.
Using measurements of the forward scattering parameter S
21 at various bath temperatures between 65 and 250 mK, we
determined that the Al-Mn LEKIDs we fabricated have internal quality factors greater than
2 × 105, which is high enough for millimeter-wave astrophysical observations.
In the dark conditions under which these devices were measured, the fractional frequency
noise spectrum
shows a shallow slope that depends on bath temperature and probe tone amplitude, which
could be two-level system noise. The anticipated white photon
noise should
dominate this level of low-frequency noise when the detectors are illuminated with millimeter-waves in future
measurements. The LEKIDs responded to light pulses from a 1550 nm light-emitting diode,
and we used these light pulses to determine that the quasiparticle lifetime is 60 μs. |
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ISSN: | 0003-6951 1077-3118 |
DOI: | 10.1063/1.4984105 |