Heterodyne mixing in diffusion-cooled superconducting aluminum hot-electron bolometers

Siddiqi, I. ; Verevkin, A. ; Prober, D. E.

[S.l.] : American Institute of Physics (AIP)
Published 2002
ISSN:
1089-7550
Source:
AIP Digital Archive
Topics:
Physics
Notes:
We present microwave (30 GHz) measurements on aluminum superconducting hot-electron bolometer (HEB) mixers. Aluminum HEB mixers have a lower superconducting transition temperature than niobium and niobium nitride devices, and are predicted to have improved sensitivity and require less local oscillator power. The devices studied consist of a narrow superconducting aluminum microbridge with contacts comprised of thick aluminum, titanium, and gold. A perpendicular magnetic field is used to suppress superconductivity in the contacts. The device length is much shorter than the electron–phonon inelastic length [L(very-much-less-than)(Dτe–ph)1/2] and thus the intermediate frequency (IF) bandwidth is set by the diffusion time of hot electrons from the microbridge into the contacts. We discuss limitations on the IF bandwidth in very short HEB mixers with fully normal contacts. Overall, the microwave heterodyne mixing results show good performance with a mixer noise temperature inferred from the conversion efficiency and output noise of TM≥4 K, double side band (DSB). Measurements at 618 GHz yield a conversion efficiency approximately 10 dB lower than observed at 30 GHz. Output saturation by background radiation is postulated to contribute significantly to this difference. A similar decrease in conversion efficiency in the microwave mixing measurements is observed when broadband noise is added to the rf input signal. We discuss the tradeoff between increased sensitivity and the occurrence of saturation effects in low transition temperature HEBs. © 2002 American Institute of Physics.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL: