Publication | Closed Access
1 mm ultrafast superconducting stripline molecule detector
53
Citations
15
References
2009
Year
Superconducting MaterialEngineeringBiological Mass SpectrometryMolecular BiologyDetector PhysicsAnalytical InstrumentationBioanalysisSuperconductivityQuantum MaterialsAnalytical ChemistryInstrumentationBiophysicsPhysicsImmunoglobulin GStripline DetectorsBiomedical DiagnosticsSpectroscopyBioelectronicsApplied PhysicsMass SpectrometryDetector PhysicMedicineHigh-throughput Screening
Superconducting stripline detectors (SSLDs) are promising for detecting keV molecules at nanosecond response times and with mass-independent detection efficiency. However, a fast response time is incompatible with practical centimeter detector size. A parallel configuration of striplines provides a means to address this problem. Experimental results and simulation for promisingly large 1-mm-square parallel niobium SSLDs show that nanosecond pulses are produced by superconducting-normal transition within only one of the parallel striplines instead of cascade switching of all the parallel striplines. Successful detection of a series of multimers of immunoglobulin G up to 584 kDa supports the mass-independent efficiency for mass spectrometry.
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