Understanding multiscale disorder in superconducting nanowire single photon detectors
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2601.23277v1
- Date: Fri, 30 Jan 2026 18:48:11 GMT
- Title: Understanding multiscale disorder in superconducting nanowire single photon detectors
- Authors: Nirjhar Sarkar, Ronan Gourgues, Yueh-Chun Wu, Chengyun Hua, Katyayani Seal, Andreas Fognini, Steven Randolph, Eugene Dumitrescu, Gabor B. Halasz, Benjamin Lawrie,
- Abstract summary: Superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors are central to applications across quantum information science.<n>Yet, their performance is limited by the effects of disorder and electrodynamic inhomogeneities that are not well understood.<n>By combining DC transport, dark-count measurements, and bias-dependent microwave transmission spectroscopy, we distinguish local instability-driven processes from intrinsic superconducting depairing and kinetic inductance nonlinearities.
- Score: 0.07011163462208897
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: Superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors are central to applications across quantum information science. Yet, their performance is limited by the effects of disorder and electrodynamic inhomogeneities that are not well understood. By combining DC transport, dark-count measurements, and bias-dependent microwave transmission spectroscopy in the presence of controlled nanoscale disorder introduced through helium-ion irradiation, we distinguish local instability-driven processes from intrinsic superconducting depairing and kinetic inductance nonlinearities. This approach enables systematic tuning of kinetic inductance, depairing currents, microwave dissipation, and mode structure within a single device. Bias- and temperature-dependent resonance shifts quantify disorder-induced modifications of the superconducting density of states through the nonlinear kinetic inductance, while the emergence of multiple resonant modes reveals the formation of electrodynamically distinct superconducting regions. Comparing depairing under current, field, and temperature isolates the dominant microwave loss mechanisms, separating vortex, quasiparticle, and two-level-system contributions, thus providing a robust multifunctional foundation for disorder engineering of superconducting nanowire detectors and resonators.
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