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Keisuke KUROIWA Masaki KADOWAKI Masataka MORIYA Hiroshi SHIMADA Yoshinao MIZUGAKI
Superconducting integrated circuits should be operated at low temperature below a half of their critical temperatures. Thermal heat from a bias resistor could rise the temperature in Josephson junctions, and would reduce their critical currents. In this study, we estimate the temperature in a Josephson junction heated by a bias resistor at the bath temperature of 4.2 K, and introduce a parameter β that connects the thermal heat from a bias resistor and the temperature elevation of a Josephson junction. By using β, the temperature in the Josephson junction can be estimated as functions of the current through the resistor.
Keisuke KUROIWA Masataka MORIYA Tadayuki KOBAYASHI Yoshinao MIZUGAKI
Although larger scale integration enhances the practicability of superconducting Josephson circuits, several technical problems begin to emerge during its progress. One of the problems is the increase of current through a ground plane (ground current). Excess ground current produces additional magnetic field and reduces operation margins of the circuits, because superconducting Josephson devices are very sensitive to magnetic field. In this paper, we evaluate current distribution in a superconducting ground plane by means of both experiments and numerical calculation. We also verify two methods for suppressing the ground current. One is a slot structure in the ground plane, and the other is alignment of the current-extraction point. Suppression of the ground current is quantitatively evaluated.