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Large bandwidth and low noise in a diffusion-cooled hot-electron bolometer mixer
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1996
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Large BandwidthElectrical EngineeringEngineeringRf SemiconductorPhysicsHigh-frequency DeviceApplied PhysicsSuperconductivityWaveguide MixerNoiseLow NoiseElectron DiffusionTerahertz NetworkHeterodyne MeasurementsInstrumentationMicroelectronicsMicrowave Engineering
Heterodyne measurements have been made at 533 GHz using a novel superconducting hot-electron bolometer in a waveguide mixer. The bolometer is a 0.3 μm long niobium microbridge with a superconducting transition temperature of 5 K. The short length ensures that electron diffusion dominates over electron-phonon interactions as the electron cooling mechanism, which should allow heterodyne detection with intermediate frequencies (if) of several GHz. A Y-factor response of 1.15 dB has been obtained at an if of 1.4 GHz with 77 and 295 K loads, indicating a receiver noise temperature of 650 K DSB. The −3 dB rolloff in the if response occurs at 1.7 GHz.