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Published March 14, 2013 | Submitted + Published
Journal Article Open

Operation of a titanium nitride superconducting microresonator detector in the nonlinear regime

Abstract

If driven sufficiently strongly, superconducting microresonators exhibit nonlinear behavior including response bifurcation. This behavior can arise from a variety of physical mechanisms including heating effects, grain boundaries or weak links, vortex penetration, or through the intrinsic nonlinearity of the kinetic inductance. Although microresonators used for photon detection are usually driven fairly hard in order to optimize their sensitivity, most experiments to date have not explored detector performance beyond the onset of bifurcation. Here, we present measurements of a lumped-element superconducting microresonator designed for use as a far-infrared detector and operated deep into the nonlinear regime. The 1 GHz resonator was fabricated from a 22 nm thick titanium nitride film with a critical temperature of 2 K and a normal-state resistivity of 100 μΩ cm. We measured the response of the device when illuminated with 6.4 pW optical loading using microwave readout powers that ranged from the low-power, linear regime to 18 dB beyond the onset of bifurcation. Over this entire range, the nonlinear behavior is well described by a nonlinear kinetic inductance. The best noise-equivalent power of 2×10^(−16) W/Hz^(1/2) at 10 Hz was measured at the highest readout power, and represents a ∼10 fold improvement compared with operating below the onset of bifurcation.

Additional Information

© 2013 American Institute of Physics. Received 26 November 2012; accepted 22 February 2013; published online 8 March 2013. The authors wish to thank Teun Klapwijk and David Moore for useful discussions relating to this work. This work was supported in part by the Keck Institute for Space Science, the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation. Part of this research was carried out at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), California Institute of Technology, under a contract with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. The devices used in this work were fabricated at the JPL Microdevices Laboratory. L. Swenson acknowledges the support from the NASA Postdoctoral Program. L. Swenson and C. McKenney acknowledge funding from the Keck Institute for Space Science.

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Published - JApplPhys_113_104501.pdf

Submitted - 1305.4281v1.pdf

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