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REVIEW OF SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENTS

VOLUME 71, NUMBER 1

JANUARY 2000

Phase locked 270 ­ 440 GHz local oscillator based on flux flow in long Josephson tunnel junctions
Valery P. Koshelets, Sergey V. Shitov, and Lyudmila V. Filippenko
Institute of Radio Engineering and Electronics, Russian Academy of Sciences, 103907 Moscow, Russia

Vladimir L. Vaks
Institute for Physics of Microstructure, Russian Academy of Sciences, 603600 Nizhny Novgorod, Russia

Jesper Myginda)
Department of Physics, Technical University of Denmark, DK-2800 Lyngby, Denmark

Andrey M. Baryshev, Willem Luinge, and Nick Whyborn
SRON-Groningen, 9700 AV Groningen, The Netherlands

Received 28 June 1999; accepted for publication 27 September 1999 The combination of narrow linewidth and wide band tunability makes the Josephson flux flow oscillator FFO a perfect on-chip local oscillator for integrated sub-mm wave receivers for, e.g., spectral radio astronomy. The feasibility of phase locking the FFO to an external reference oscillator is demonstrated experimentally. A FFO linewidth as low as 1 Hz determined by the resolution bandwidth of the spectrum analyzer has been measured in the frequency range 270 ­ 440 GHz relative to a reference oscillator. This linewidth is far below the fundamental level given by shot and thermal noise of the free-running tunnel junction. The results of residual FFO phase noise measurements are also presented. Finally, we propose a single-chip fully superconductive receiver with two superconductor ­ insulator ­ superconductor mixers and an integrated phase-locked loop. © 2000 American Institute of Physics. S0034-6748 00 01701-9

I. INTRODUCTION

The Josephson flux flow oscillator FFO has proven to be a reliable wide band and easy tunable local oscillator suitable for integration with a superconductor ­ insulator ­ superconductor SIS mixer in a single-chip sub-millimeter wave receiver.2 A DSB noise temperature below 100 K has been achieved for an integrated receiver with the FFO operating near 500 GHz.3 The antenna beam, approximately f /10 with sidelobes below 17 dB,3 makes the integrated receiver suitable for coupling to the real telescope. For spectral radioastronomy applications besides the noise temperature and the antenna beam pattern, the frequency resolution of the receiver, which is determined by both the instant linewidth of the local oscillator and its long-time stability, should be much less than 1 ppm of the center frequency. Recently a reliable technique for linewidth measurements was developed4 and a free-running FFO linewidth as low as a few hundred kHz has been observed.4,5 The reduction of the linewidth obtained by phase locking described below significantly improves the spectral resolution of the sub-mm receiver. Equally important is that the coexisting wide band lock-in tunability of the FFO enables a large spectral coverage.
II. LINEWIDTH AND TUNING OF THE FFO

1

tional flow of fluxons, each containing one magnetic flux quantum 0 h /2e 2 10 15 Wb. Symbol h is Planck's constant and e is the electron charge. The junction is onedimensional with length L J and width W J , where J is the Josephson penetration length. An integrated control line with current I CL is used to generate the dc magnetic field applied to the FFO. The velocity and density of the fluxons and thus the power and frequency of the emitted mm wave signal may be easily tuned by either of the two external parameters. According to the Josephson relation the junction biased at voltage V oscillates with a frequency f (1/ 0 ) V , where the prefactor equals 483.6 GHz/mV. The damping of the FFO is characterized by the shunt damping parameter 1/ c , where c is the McCumber parameter. Presently no reliable theory exists for the FFO linewidth and preliminary estimations6 have to be made on the basis of the general theory for the radiation linewidth of the lumped Josephson tunnel junction.7 The linewidth, f , of a Josephson junction is mainly determined by low frequency current fluctuations. For white noise it can be written see, e.g. Ref. 8 as f 2/
2 0

R

B2 d Si

0,

1

The FFO is a long Josephson tunnel junction in which an applied dc magnetic field and a bias current drive a unidireca

where S i ( 0 ) is the density of the low frequency current fluctuations, and R B V / I B is the dc differential resistance d which transforms the current fluctuations to voltage and phase noise. For a lumped tunnel junction7,8 Si 0 e /2 IB V
dc

coth v , with v

eV

dc

/ 2 k BT

eff

Electronic mail: myg@fysik.dtu.dk 289

, 2

0034-6748/2000/71(1)/289/5/$17.00

© 2000 American Institute of Physics


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where k B is Boltzmann's constant. I B and V dc are the current and averaged dc voltage in the bias point. T eff is the effective temperature of the quasiparticles in the junction electrodes. This formula describes a nonlinear superposition of thermal and shot noise. It should be noted that the formula does not take into account the spatial variation of the tunnel current along the FFO, the interactions of the moving fluxons, and the influence of the external low frequency interference. All these effects are believed to increase the FFO linewidth. Fluctuations in the external magnetic field can be accounted for by the differential tuning resistance of the control line R CL V FFO / I CL for fixed dc bias current I B . In d the case of an external interference both the ``usual'' differential resistance R B and R CL ``convert'' low frequency exd d ( ternal noise currents, I lfB , CL) , to frequency fluctuations following the same relations: fR
B ,CL d

*I

B ,CL lf

.

3

According to Eqs. 1 and 3 the radiation linewidth may be reduced by lowering the spectral noise density and/or the differential resistance at low frequencies, f f . This can be done by appropriate shunting of the junction at low frequencies and/or suppression of the current fluctuations by an external phase-locked loop PLL system with a bandwidth larger than f with feedback through either of the two bias current channels. In this article a significant reduction of the FFO linewidth relative to that of the intrinsic FFO linewidth determined by wide band thermal fluctuations is demonstrated experimentally by using an external electronic PLL.
III. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP

FIG. 1. Block diagram of the PLL circuit and linewidth measurement setup. The central components are the cryogenic chip with its FFO and SIS mixer, the cooled low-noise 400 MHz high electron mobility transistor IF amplifier, and the 10 GHz synthesizer, that also generates the 10 MHz reference signals for the spectrum analyzer and the phase detector in the PLL.

A block diagram of the setup for linewidth measurements is shown in Fig. 1. Details of the chip design are published elsewhere.4,5 The FFO linewidth is measured in the frequency range up to 600 GHz with a new experimental technique.4 The sub-mm wave signal coming from the FFO is mixed in the SIS Josephson mixer with the n th harmonic of the external synthesizer frequency f SYN about 10 GHz . In order to prevent the external oscillator signal as well as its low harmonics from reaching the FFO a high-pass microstrip filter with a cut-off frequency of about 200 GHz is used. The intermediate frequency IF signal with frequency, ( f FFO nf SYN) is amplified in a cooled amplifier with f IF noise temperature T n 20 K and 27 dB gain. After additional room temperature amplification the signal enters the PLL system. A small fraction of the signal is applied via the directional coupler to a spectrum analyzer which is also phase locked to the synthesizer by a common 10 MHz reference signal. By using this technique the downconverted FFO spectrum is measured see Fig. 2 . The spectrum recorded is the difference between the FFO signal and the n th harmonic of the synthesizer, and thus the FFO phase noise is measured relative to the appropriate synthesizer harmonic. In the PLL unit the signal frequency is divided by four and in a frequency-phase discriminator compared with a 100 MHz reference signal also phase locked to the main 10 GHz synthesizer. The output signal proportional to the phase dif-

ference is returned via the loop bandwidth regulator maximum bandwidth about 10 MHz to the FFO current bias through the coaxial cable and the cold 50 resistor mounted on the bias plate. The same coaxial cable that enters the cryostat is used for both the 10 GHz synthesizer signal and the PLL control output. The couplers with microstrip filters are used to combine and split these signals. In order to perform accurate linewidth measurement the IF spectra have to be averaged with a sufficiently small video bandwidth. The PLL system with a relatively low loop gain and narrow bandwidth setting 10 kHz can be used for frequency locking of the FFO to the 10 GHz synthesizer in order to measure the linewidth, f AUT , of the free-running FFO. In this case the spectral shape of the measured linewidth is rather wide but the average frequency remains stable.
IV. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

It was experimentally found6 that the PLL system can considerably narrow the FFO linewidth if f AUT measured at the 3 dB level is smaller than the PLL regulation bandwidth, B PLL . Opposite to the case described above where f AUT B PLL only frequency locking without a noticeable linewidth change is achieved. In the intermediate range where f AUT is comparable to but smaller than B PLL( 2.5 MHz f AUT 10 MHz) there is an increase of the FFO power at the central frequency while the FFO linewidth is reduced measurements were done at FFO bias points with


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FIG. 2. The down converted IF power spectra of the FFO ( f 387 GHz) recorded with different frequency spans clearly demonstrate the phase locking.

different values of R B and R CL . Full phase locking takes d d place for f AUT 2.5 MHz. Figure 2 shows typical IF power spectra of the phase-locked FFO measured at f FFO 387 GHz for different settings of the spectrum analyzer. A FFO linewidth as low as 1 Hz is presented in Fig. 2 c . This value is actually determined by the limited resolution bandwidth of the spectrum analyzer. It means that the FFO linewidth can be reduced below the value determined by the fundamental shot and thermal fluctuations of the freerunning tunnel junction. A consequence of the phase locking is the appearance of a vertical step ( R B 0 ) in the dc current-voltage characterisd tic IVC of the FFO at the voltage corresponding to the frequency f FFO where the FFO is locked; see Eq. 1 . The position of this step is also insensitive to small changes in the control line current, and accordingly also R CL 0. A hold-in d range of the FFO bias voltage as large as 1.5 V has been

experimentally measured. This corresponds to an effective PLL regulation band of about 750 MHz. The pull-in limit depends on the position of the operation point on the resonant Fiske step FS , and it was approximately equal to the hold-in range. It should be noted that this step is not a harmonic Shapiro step. First, it is shifted from the appropriate position by 0.8 V corresponding to the PLL input frequency 400 MHz . Furthermore, the position of the vertical step can be tuned precisely by changing the reference signal. A reference signal in the frequency range of 90 ­ 110 MHz can be applied from a second synthesizer phased locked to the first one see Fig. 1 in steps of 0.1 Hz minimum increment of the synthesizer . This corresponds to a voltage accuracy of 2 10 16 V. It should be noted that phase locking of the FFO presently has only been realized on steep FSs, where the freerunning FFO linewidth is about 1 MHz due to the small values of R B . Experimentally an increase of the FFO lined width has been found at voltages higher than a certain boundary voltage, V b ; 5 correspondingly, the IVC of the FFO is modified and the internal damping increases abruptly at this threshold. The boundary voltage V b 950 V for Nb ­ AlOx ­ Nb tunnel junctions 1/3 of the superconductor gap voltage, V g . A simple model based on Josephson radiation self-coupling JSC 9 was introduced5 to explain the experimentally measured IVC. The JSC caused by the absorption of the internal ac Josephson radiation photons by the quasiparticles results in current ``bumps'' at the voltage V JSC V g /(2 n 1 ) , which gives V JSC V g /3 for n 1. The effect of self-pumping explains the abrupt vanishing of the FS for V V g /3 due to the strongly increased damping.10 For operation at all FFO voltages including V V b additional efforts should be undertaken to decrease the dynamic resistance and thus the initial FFO linewidth. Also an ultrawide band PLL system with sufficiently low phase noise is needed. In this context the ongoing development of an onchip integrated phase detector looks very promising. The PLL bandwidth in this case will not be limited by the electrical properties of the long interconnection cables. Also, a number of stability and noise problems related to electronics kept at room temperature may be avoided. The cryogenic phase detector, low noise amplifiers, etc. can be constructed using existing superconducting electronic components. The residual phase noise of the phase-locked FFO measured relative to the reference synthesizer is plotted in Fig. 3 data from Fig. 2 as function of the offset from the 400 MHz carrier. The specification and measured data for the synthesizer used HP83752B are shown in Fig. 3 as well. Actually the FFO was locked to the 36th harmonic of the synthesizer at this measurement, and to get the real FFO phase noise one should add to the measured residual FFO phase noise the synthesizer noise multiplied by n 2 1296 as shown in Fig. 3. The advantage of this scheme is that the spectral purity of the fixed frequency low frequency reference oscillator is transferred to the FFO which operates at a much higher frequency. Even more important is that the phase-locked FFO, while being tuned over a wide frequency band, maintains this low phase noise. The problem no longer is to reduce the intrinsic linewidth of the free-running FFO but merely to get


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FIG. 3. Experimentally measured phase noise of the phase-locked FFO at 387 GHz compared with the data for the 10 GHz HP83752B synthesizer. Since the residual phase noise of the FFO is measured relative to the 36th harmonic of the synthesizer, one must add its phase noise multiplied by 362 1296 in order to get the total phase noise of the phase-locked FFO.

the low phase noise reference oscillator and the wide band PLL. The results given above demonstrate our ability to control and significantly narrow the linewidth of a Josephson oscillator using an external electronic PLL system, provided that the PLL bandwidth is larger than the intrinsic linewidth of the Josephson oscillator. Even at the present state of development the integrated receiver with the PLL system is applicable for practical spectral radio astronomy in the frequency range of 400 ­ 450 GHz. In this frequency range the Fiske steps of our Nb ­ AlOx ­ Nb FFO are closely spaced and almost overlap because of the dispersion of the long Josephson tunnel junction.10 The frequency gaps between the bands on subsequent FSs where FFO phase locking is possible are considerably smaller than 8 GHz. It means that frequencies within these gaps can be covered by the FFO when it is biased on a neighboring FS by using a wide band IF amplifier with a bandwidth of up to 4 GHz, resulting in an integrated receiver with continuous frequency coverage and complete phase locking. A low value of the damping coefficient, , in the long junction gives steep FSs with small R B high-Q Fiske resod nances while the voltage difference between successive FSs scales inversely with the junction length L. So with the present limitations of the PLL bandwidth optimization of the FFO parameters, e.g., those based on numerical simulations, is needed in order to extend the frequency range of phaselocked operation to frequencies above approx 500 GHz ( V V b ) where Josephson self-coupling and surface resistance in the superconducting films increase the damping considerably. It is still an experimental challenge to obtain phaselocked operation of the FFO in the ``true'' flux flow regime approaching the where the normalized damping L / f Eck limit10 .
V. FUTURE DEVELOPMENTS OF THE INTEGRATED RECEIVER

FIG. 4. Block diagram of the proposed submillimeter all-superconducting phase-locked single-chip integrated receiver. The common FFO supplies two SIS mixers, one serves as the detector/mixer, and the other facilitates the phase locking and tuning see the text of the FFO via the PLL circuit.

locking of the FFO.6 In this concept two separate SIS mixers are placed on one chip and both connected at high frequencies to the same FFO. One SIS mixer serves as the heterodyne detector in the receiver while the other is used for phase locking the FFO to a reference oscillator. Using this concept a prototype 350 GHz integrated superconducting heterodyne receiver containing a phase-locked flux-flow oscillator has been designed and fabricated. The circuit see Fig. 4 of the single-chip receiver contains one FFO as a common local oscillator for both a high-quality quasioptical low-noise SIS mixer/detector and a harmonic SIS mixer eventually with a SIS frequency multiplier, optional for the PLL circuit. The FFO is phase locked to the 35th harmonic of an external 10 GHz synthesized low-phase noise source using customdesigned room temperature electronics with a PLL loop bandwidth B PLL of about 10 MHz and IF frequency f IF 400 MHz. Testing of the novel chip is in progress. In the future one also may integrate on the receiver chip the reference oscillator, the PLL circuitry, the IF amplifiers, and an analog/digital converter for fast pre-processing of data. All components may be fabricated with the present superconductor technology.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

An all-superconducting phase-locked integrated receiver has been proposed based on the above technique for phase

The authors thank Th. de Graauw, H. Golstein, M. Samuelsen, and H. van de Stadt for fruitful and stimulating dis-


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cussions as well as H. Smit and D. Van Nguyen for help in the experiment. The work was supported in part by the Russian SSP ``Superconductivity,'' INTAS Project No. 97-1712, the Danish Research Academy, the Danish Natural Science Foundation, the Netherlandse Organisatie voor Wetenshappelijk Onderzoek NWO a grant , and ESA TRP Contract No. 11/653/95/NL/PB/SC.
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