APS March Meeting 2011
Volume 56, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 21–25, 2011;
Dallas, Texas
Session A5: Industrial Physics Forum: Small-Scale Applications
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Monday, March 21, 2011
Room: Ballroom C1
Sponsoring
Unit:
FIAP
Chair: Frederick Dylla, American Institute of Physics
Abstract ID: BAPS.2011.MAR.A5.2
Abstract: A5.00002 : Superconductor Digital Electronics: -- Current Status, Future Prospects
8:36 AM–9:12 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Oleg Mukhanov
(HYPRES)
Two major applications of superconductor electronics:
communications and
supercomputing will be presented. These areas hold a significant
promise of
a large impact on electronics state-of-the-art for the defense and
commercial markets stemming from the fundamental advantages of
superconductivity: simultaneous high speed and low power, lossless
interconnect, natural quantization, and high sensitivity. The
availability
of relatively small cryocoolers lowered the foremost market
barrier for
cryogenically-cooled superconductor electronic systems. These
fundamental
advantages enabled a novel Digital-RF architecture - a disruptive
technological approach changing wireless communications, radar, and
surveillance system architectures dramatically. Practical results
were
achieved for Digital-RF systems in which wide-band, multi-band radio
frequency signals are directly digitized and digital domain is
expanded
throughout the entire system. Digital-RF systems combine digital
and mixed
signal integrated circuits based on Rapid Single Flux Quantum (RSFQ)
technology, superconductor analog filter circuits, and semiconductor
post-processing circuits. The demonstrated cryocooled Digital-RF
systems are
the world's first and fastest directly digitizing receivers
operating with
live satellite signals, enabling multi-net data links, and
performing signal
acquisition from HF to L-band with 30 GHz clock frequencies. In
supercomputing, superconductivity leads to the highest energy
efficiencies
per operation. Superconductor technology based on manipulation
and ballistic
transfer of magnetic flux quanta provides a superior low-power
alternative
to CMOS and other charge-transfer based device technologies. The
fundamental
energy consumption in SFQ circuits defined by flux quanta energy
2x10$^{-19}$ J. Recently, a novel energy-efficient
zero-static-power SFQ
technology, eSFQ/ERSFQ was invented, which retains all advantages of
standard RSFQ circuits: high-speed, dc power, internal memory.
The voltage
bias regulation, determined by SFQ clock, enables the
\textit{zero-power at zero-activity regimes}, indispensable for
sensor and quantum bit readout.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2011.MAR.A5.2