Nanosecond gating of superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors using cryogenic bias circuitry

Journal Article (2023)
Author(s)

Thomas Hummel (Paderborn University)

Alex Widhalm (Paderborn University)

Jan Philipp Höpker (Paderborn University)

K. D. Jöns (Paderborn University)

J. Chang (TU Delft - QN/Groeblacher Lab)

Andreas Fognini (Single Quantum)

Stephan Steinhauer (KTH Royal Institute of Technology)

Val Zwiller (KTH Royal Institute of Technology)

Artur Zrenner (Paderborn University)

Tim J. Bartley (Paderborn University)

Research Group
QN/Groeblacher Lab
Copyright
© 2023 Thomas Hummel, Alex Widhalm, Jan Philipp Höpker, Klaus D. Jöns, J. Chang, Andreas Fognini, Stephan Steinhauer, Val Zwiller, Artur Zrenner, Tim J. Bartley
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1364/OE.472058
More Info
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Publication Year
2023
Language
English
Copyright
© 2023 Thomas Hummel, Alex Widhalm, Jan Philipp Höpker, Klaus D. Jöns, J. Chang, Andreas Fognini, Stephan Steinhauer, Val Zwiller, Artur Zrenner, Tim J. Bartley
Research Group
QN/Groeblacher Lab
Issue number
1
Volume number
31
Pages (from-to)
610-625
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

Superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors (SNSPDs) show near unity efficiency, low dark count rate, and short recovery time. Combining these characteristics with temporal control of SNSPDs broadens their applications as in active de-latching for higher dynamic range counting or temporal filtering for pump-probe spectroscopy or LiDAR. To that end, we demonstrate active gating of an SNSPD with a minimum off-to-on rise time of 2.4 ns and a total gate length of 5.0 ns. We show how the rise time depends on the inductance of the detector in combination with the control electronics. The gate window is demonstrated to be fully and freely, electrically tunable up to 500 ns at a repetition rate of 1.0 MHz, as well as ungated, free-running operation. Control electronics to generate the gating are mounted on the 2.3 K stage of a closed-cycle sorption cryostat, while the detector is operated on the cold stage at 0.8 K. We show that the efficiency and timing jitter of the detector is not altered during the on-time of the gating window. We exploit gated operation to demonstrate a method to increase in the photon counting dynamic range by a factor 11.2, as well as temporal filtering of a strong pump in an emulated pump-probe experiment.

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