DocumentCode
1756908
Title
Pulse-Bias Electronics and Techniques for a Josephson Arbitrary Waveform Synthesizer
Author
Benz, Samuel P. ; Waltman, Steven B.
Author_Institution
Nat. Inst. of Stand. & Technol., Boulder, CO, USA
Volume
24
Issue
6
fYear
2014
fDate
Dec. 2014
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
7
Abstract
The Josephson arbitrary waveform synthesizer (JAWS) is a series array of thousands of superconducting Josephson junctions that are biased by current pulses such that the array produces voltage waveforms with quantum accuracy. Intrinsically accurate voltage waveforms synthesized with the quantized pulses from Josephson junctions were first demonstrated in 1996. Ten years later, a commercial ac standard was calibrated at an output root-mean-square (RMS) amplitude of 100 mV with the first practical superconducting digital-to-analog converter. Since then, many different bias techniques, pulse-drive electronics, and device technology have been developed and improved in order to achieve a maximum of 138 mV output RMS voltage per Josephson array. In this paper, we report new bias electronics and demonstrate two new pulse-bias techniques. The first technique has demonstrated 250 mV output RMS voltage per 6400-junction array and may enable a practical 1 V system with only four arrays. The second bias technique reduces inductance-related error signals at the signal frequency and should reduce systematic errors for waveforms with frequencies greater than 1 MHz.
Keywords
Josephson effect; digital-analogue conversion; superconducting integrated circuits; waveform generators; Josephson arbitrary waveform synthesizer; current pulses; inductance-related error signals; output root-mean-square amplitude; pulse-bias electronics; pulse-bias techniques; quantized pulses; quantum accuracy; signal frequency; superconducting Josephson junctions; superconducting digital-to-analog converter; voltage waveforms; Digital-analog conversion; Josephson junctions; Quantization (signal); Signal synthesis; Superconducting integrated circuits; Voltage measurement; Digital???analog conversion; Josephson arrays; quantization; signal synthesis; standards; superconducting integrated circuits; voltage measurement;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1051-8223
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TASC.2014.2338326
Filename
6853355
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