I have studied the nonlinearities of superconducting microwave filters for a long time. My search for variety has
lead to two quite different directions to take this phenomenology: Toward pure science in the study of the extrinsic
sources of noninearity; Toward applied science in the exploitation of nonlinearity to create devices.
1
Studies of the Extrinsic Sources of
Nonlinearity
IBackground and motivation.
The
microwave nonlinearity of superconductors was well known before the discovery
of HTS, and shortly after its discovery, nonlinearity was already a subject of
research[1].In 1994, the observation of nonlinear
signal distortion in superconducting filters was first reported[2].Ten years later, nonlinear signal
distortion still plagues the superconducting devices in commercial use[3].I propose to systematically study the
extrinsic causes of nonlinearity.
Superconductivity
is an ideal research area for physics undergraduates.When I first began studying this subject
as a graduate student, I was impressed by its use of all of the elements of the
physics curriculum: electromagnetics in the London model; thermodynamics and statistical mechanics in
Ginzburg-Landau theory; quantum mechanics in BCS theory and flux quantization;
even classical mechanics in the Drude-like two-fluid model equation of motion.Superconductivity is a research topic
which is both accessible to undergraduates and relies on this broad use of
physics.The field is accessible
due to the small-scale nature of its experiments and the phenomenological
descriptions of superconducting properties.
IIExperimental setup
Distortion
is measured by introducing a clean sinusoidal signal at frequency, f, to a device
sample and examining the harmonic content of the electromagnetic fields in the
presence of the sample.This
measurement is called harmonic distortion, and the emitted components will be
at integer multiples of the incident frequency: 2f, 3f We sometimes turn to measurement of 3rd
order intermodulation distortion (IMD)[4], as
shown in Fig. 1.Here we measure
the mixing between the 2nd and 3rd harmonics of two
closely spaced input signals, f1 and f2, at 3f2-2f1
and 3f1-2f2.
The
various values of the 2nd and 3rd harmonic and the IMD
will be dominated by different extrinsic mechanisms.Especially at low temperatures, fluxon
nucleation in the grain boundaries dominates the 2nd harmonic[5]. The nonlinear conductivity of the grain
boundaries dominates the 3rd harmonic[6],
while both are expected to dominate the IMD.At higher temperatures, nucleation of
fluxons at the edge of the film often dominates all components of the nonlinearity[7].We will do measurements on resonators of
various geometries from about 25 Kelvin to TC, giving all of these
mechanisms the opportunity to cause observable nonlinearity in these
experiments.
A
test sample and its fixture are depicted in Fig. 2.The disk resonator is excited in the TM010
mode which has no current at the film edge[8].In contrast to this TEM mode resonators
are characterized by current crowding at the film edge.So by using both types of sample, the
two dominant extrinsic causes of nonlinearity will be viewed.
We
have already fabricated thin film HTS devices and measured their nonlinearity
in a different laboratory[9].The experimental samples in Fig. 2 will
allow us to consider the nonlinearity of YBa2Cu3O7 and
Tl2Ba2CaCu2O8 with so many of the
dominant variables kept out of the picture.Different extrinsic mechanisms dominate
the nonlinearity in the low and the high temperature regions, with Josephson
fluxons dominant at the low temperatures and edge critical state flux dominant
at high temperature8.
Studies of the Intrinsic Sources of
Nonlinearity
The
fluxon generated nonlinearity described above is considered to be extrinsic in
nature.The proposed experiments do
not consider intrinsic nonlinearity from Gorkov excitations and the nonlinear
Meissner effect.These intrinsic
nonlinearities, in particular the nonlinear Meissner effect, are currently the
subject of study in an NSF funded program headed by Prof. Steven Anlage at the University of Maryland in which I am a co-PI[10].The above study of extrinsic nonlinearity
will serve as a compliment to that investigation.However, ultimately, the local probe
method used in the NSF work can permit the direct observation of extrinsic
nonlinearities due to Josephson vortices.
Making Nonlinearity Useful
Radio frequency (RF) circuit
designers are increasingly confronted with the need to account for and also
harness nonlinear behavior of circuit elements.The harnessing of nonlinearity dates
back to frequency modulation and the birth of the heterodyne technique[11].Accounting for nonlinearity is growing
in importance in step with the use of digital modulation of radio signals.For example, spectral regrowth around a
loaded CDMA frequency assignment reduces the network capacity by forcing
transmitters to go to higher power.Accurate knowledge of device nonlinearity and predictive modeling of
nonlinear behavior, have become essential tools of RF design.
Earlier this year Maury Microwave
Corporation (U.S.A) and NMDG Engineering, bvba (Belgium)
announced the release of a large signal network analyzer (LSNA) under license
from Agilent Technologies[12].
A calibrated diode would provide
the user with a known magnitude and phase of both the fundamental and the
higher harmonics for use in LSNA calibration.But the lack of a low noise diode has
forced LSNA users to follow a more complicated calibration procedure which
includes the calibration approach for a classic VNA plus the added correction
of the amplitude and phase errors of the harmonics relative to the fundamental[13].
This calibration approach is not
too much more detailed than that of a conventional VNA.However, an affordable nonlinear device
could serve calibration purposes, and could be used as a primary reference for
the phase and amplitude of the fundamental and higher harmonics.I intend to pursue the development of a
superconducting microstrip nonlinearity reference, fully integrated in a user
friendly portable cryogenic package.
A 50 Ohm transmission line will be
designed and patterned onto a YBCO thin film.Nonlinear transmission lines were
modeled in the Ginzburg-Landau formalism by Megahed[14].Coutts, et al.[15] went
on to show the predictability of the amplitude attenuation and the phase of the
signal as it propagates down a nonlinear transmission line.In a later work, Coutts, et al.[16]
demonstrated a nonlinear HTS transmission line with power controlled phase
shift.Our design will build on an
understanding of nonlinear transmission lines derived from the various results
mentioned above, to design an HTS-based nonlinear transmission line patterned
onto a wafer (or a chip) of YBCO on LaAlO3.
[1]
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[2]
Salvadore H. Talisa, Mark A. Robertson, Brian J. Meier and Joseph E. Sluz, IEEE
MTT-S Digest (1994).
[3] S. K. Remillard, H.R. Yi and Amr Abdelmonem, IEEE
Trans. Appl. Superconductivity, 13,
3797 (2003).
[4] Stephen K. Remillard, L.J. Klemptner, James D. Hodge,
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YM Habib, CJ Lehner, DE Oates, LR Vale, RH Ono, G Dresselhaus, and MS
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[8]
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[9] H.R. Yi, S.K. Remillard, and A. Abdelmonem, IEEE
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[13]
Jan Verspecht, FransVerbeyst, and Marc VandenBossche, Network Analysis Beyond S-Parameters: Characterizing
and Modeling Component Behaviour under Modulated
Large-Signal Operating Conditions, 56th ARFTG Conference
Proceedings, Broomfield, CO, December 2000.
[14]
Mohamed A. Megahed and Samir
M. El-Ghazaly, Nonlinear Analysis of Microwave
Superconductor Devices Using Full-Wave Electromagnetic Model, IEEE
Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques, 43, pp.2590-2599, November 1995.
[15]
G.M. Coutts, R.R. Mansour and S.K. Chaudhuri, A Novel
Approach to Modeling the Nonlinear Propagation Characteristics of HTS Planar
Transmission Lines, International Microwave Symposium, 1998.
[16]
Gordon M. Coutts, Raafat R. Mansour
and S.K. Chaudhuri, High-Temperature Superconducting Nonlinear Transmission Lines, IEEE
Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques, 48, (2000) 2511-2518.