Superconductor-normal metal-superconductor (SNS) junctions are well-suited for large-scale integrated superconducting circuits. Potential applications are programmable voltage standards, digital-to-analog converters and large-scale RSFQ circuits. The application of SNS junctions provides some advantages, e.g. a simplified fabrication technology and reduced parasitic inductances. But it requires a technological process with dimensions down to the submicrometer region to achieve sufficiently high characteristic voltages ICRN. In our process the normal metal interlayer is titanium. Therefore the sidewall insulation of the junctions can be made by anodization, as it is known from the Nb-Al technology. Nb-Ti-Nb Josephson junctions and junction arrays were fabricated down to the submicrometer range with ICRN values up to 87 microvolt depending on the titanium thickness. Their measured critical currents have a small spread of about 10 percent. Shapiro steps are observed under the influence of microwave irradiation. For the application of such junctions in a programmable Josephson voltage standard a new type of microwave circuit using coplanar strips is proposed and successfully tested in 10 V SIS circuits
Published in:
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on
(Volume:11
,
Issue:
1
)
Date of Publication: Mar 2001