DocumentCode :
1238047
Title :
Thermal design of superconducting digital circuits for milliKelvin operation
Author :
Ohki, Thomas A. ; Habif, Jonathan L. ; Feldman, Marc J. ; Bocko, Mark F.
Author_Institution :
Supercond. Digital Electron. Lab., Rochester Univ., NY, USA
Volume :
13
Issue :
2
fYear :
2003
fDate :
6/1/2003 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
978
Lastpage :
981
Abstract :
Niobium based rapid-single-flux-quantum (RSFQ) digital circuits generally operate at temperature 4 K. It is desirable to develop RSFQ circuits for operation at much lower temperatures, in particular to use as control and interface circuitry for superconducting qubits, and eventually for a full scale quantum computer. The total heat load is moderate - current designs generate 0.5 μW per bias resistor, so simple RSFQ integrated circuits are easily compatible with commercial helium dilution refrigerators, and this power can readily be reduced by several orders of magnitude for complex future designs - but thermal conductivity will be a bottleneck. We present a simple model of heat flow through standard RSFQ structures. We find that circuits designed for 4 K operation can be used with little or no modification below one Kelvin. At lower temperatures however the heat generated on chip cannot be removed, and the temperature of a working circuit will rise. We suggest fabrication design rule changes to address this problem.
Keywords :
integrated circuit design; niobium; superconducting integrated circuits; 0.5 muW; Nb; heat flow; milliKelvin operation; niobium RSFQ integrated circuit; quantum computer; superconducting digital circuit; superconducting qubit; thermal conductivity; thermal design; Computer interfaces; Digital circuits; Helium; Niobium; Power generation; Quantum computing; Resistors; Superconducting integrated circuits; Temperature control; Thermal conductivity;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1051-8223
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TASC.2003.814118
Filename :
1211769
Link To Document :
بازگشت