Reduced Parameter Spread in Arrays of Planar MgB2 Josephson Junctions Made by Focused Helium Ion Beam

ORAL

Abstract

Series arrays of up to 100 planar Josephson junctions on MgB2 film with less than 3 % spread in critical current at 10 K were successfully developed and characterized. This technique uses a 30 keV focused helium ion beam with nominal beam diameter less than 0.5 nm and range of dose from 0.9 to 3 × 10^16 (Ions/cm^2)[1] to locally damage the 25 nm-thick MgB2 thin films grown by hybrid physical-chemical deposition (HPCVD) on SiC substrates to form the junction barriers. A typical single junction has an IcRn of 70 μV at 20 K and RSJ-like current-voltage characteristics. Under microwave radiation, flat Shapiro steps up to 150 μA width appear at voltages Vn = Nn(Φ0) f, where N is the number of junction in the array, n is an integer representing Shapiro step index, and f is the applied microwave frequency. The greatly reduced spread in critical current is a significant improvement over the previous studies. This technique may lead to applications including Josephson voltage standards and arbitrary function generators that can work at around 20 K.

[1] L. Kasaei et al. AIP Advances 8, 075020 (2018); https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5030751

*This work was supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. DMR–1310087.

Presenters

  • Leila Kasaei

    • Temple University

Authors

  • Leila Kasaei

    • Temple University
  • Mengjun Li

    • Rutgers University
  • Thomas Melbourne

    • Temple University
  • Leonard C Feldman

    • Rutgers University
  • Torgny Gustafsson

    • Rutgers University
  • Ke Chen

    • Temple University
  • Xiaoxing Xi

    • Physics Department, Temple University
    • Department of Physics, Temple University
    • Physics, Temple University
    • Temple University