DocumentCode
1065170
Title
On the Nature of Resistive Transition in Disordered Superconducting Nanowires
Author
Bell, M. ; Kaurova, N. ; Divochiy, A. ; Gol´tsman, G. ; Bird, J. ; Sergeev, A. ; Verevkin, A.
Author_Institution
SUNY Univ. at Buffalo, Buffalo
Volume
17
Issue
2
fYear
2007
fDate
6/1/2007 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
267
Lastpage
270
Abstract
Hot-electron single-photon counters based on long superconducting nanowires are starting to become popular in optical and infrared technologies due to their ultimately high sensitivity and very high response speed. We investigate intrinsic fluctuations in long NbN nanowires in the temperature range of 4.2 K-20 K, i.e. above and below the superconducting transition. These fluctuations are responsible for fluctuation resistivity and also determine the noise in practical devices. Measurements of the fluctuation resistivity were performed at low current densities and also in external magnetic fields up to 5 T. Above the BCS critical temperature Tco the resistivity is well described by the Aslamazov-Larkin (AL) theory for two-dimensional samples. Below Tco the measured resistivity is in excellent agreement with the Langer-Ambegaokar-McCumber-Halperin (LAMH) theory developed for one-dimensional superconductors. Despite that our nanowires of 100 nm width are two-dimensional with respect to the coherence length, our analysis shows that at relatively low current densities the one-dimensional LAMH mechanism based on thermally induced phase slip centers dominates over the two-dimensional mechanism related to unbinding of vortex-antivortex pairs below the Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless transition.
Keywords
nanowires; superconducting materials; 1D superconductors; Aslamazov-Larkin theory; Langer-Ambegaokar-McCumber-Halperin theory; disordered superconducting nanowires; hot-electron single-photon counters; infrared technologies; optical technologies; resistive transition; Conductivity; Counting circuits; Current density; Fluctuations; Magnetic field measurement; Nanowires; Optical noise; Optical sensors; Superconducting device noise; Superconducting photodetectors; Phase-slip centers; resistivity fluctuations; superconducting nanowire; vortex-antivortex pairs;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1051-8223
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TASC.2007.898619
Filename
4277290
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