Flexible Coaxial Ribbon Cable for High-Density Superconducting Microwave Device Arrays

ORAL

Abstract

Superconducting electronics often require high-density microwave interconnects capable of transporting signals between temperature stages with minimal loss, cross talk, and heat conduction. We report the design and fabrication of superconducting 53 wt% Nb-47 wt% Ti (Nb47Ti) FLexible coAXial ribbon cables (FLAX). The ten traces each consist of a 0.076 mm Ø NbTi inner conductor insulated with PFA (Ø 0.28 mm) and sheathed in a shared 0.025 mm thick Nb47Ti outer conductor. The cable is terminated with G3PO coaxial push-on connectors via stainless steel capillary tubing (Ø 1.6 mm, 0.13 mm thick) soldered to a coplanar wave guide transition board. The 30 cm long cable has 1 dB of loss at 8 GHz with -60 dB nearest-neighbor forward cross talk. The loss is 0.5 dB more than commercially available superconducting coax likely due to impedance mismatches caused by manufacturing imperfections in the cable. The reported cross talk is 30 dB lower than previously developed laminated NbTi-onKapton microstrip cables. We estimate the heat load from 1 K to 90 mK to be 20 nW per trace, approximately half the computed load from the smallest commercially available superconducting coax from CryoCoax.

*J. P. Smith is supported by a NASA Space Technology Research Fellowship under grant number 80NSSC19K1126.

Presenters

  • Jenny Smith

    • University of California, Santa Barbara

Authors

  • Jenny Smith

    • University of California, Santa Barbara
  • Benjamin Mazin

    • University of California, Santa Barbara
  • Alex Walter

    • NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
  • Miguel Daal

    • University of California, Santa Barbara
  • J. I. Bailey

    • University of California, Santa Barbara
  • Clinton Bockstiegel

    • University of California, Santa Barbara
  • Nicholas Zobrist

    • University of California, Santa Barbara
  • Noah Swimmer

    • University of California, Santa Barbara
  • Sarah Steiger

    • University of California, Santa Barbara
  • Neelay Fruitwala

    • University of California, Santa Barbara