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Microwave amplifier noise limited by quantum particles of heat

Microwave amplifier noise limited by quantum particles of heat

Technology News |
By eeNews Europe



Now, scientists at Chalmers University of Technology, as part of an international collaboration, have demonstrated how noise in a microwave amplifier is limited by self-heating at very low temperatures.

Faint microwave signals are detected by transistor-based low-noise amplifiers. Researchers at Chalmers University of Technology have optimised indium phosphide transistors using a special process for this purpose. A spin-off company from Chalmers, Low Noise Factory, designs and packages amplifier circuits.

This is an electron microscope image of an indium phosphide high electron mobility transistor (InP HEMT). The region affected by the self-heating process is highlighted in the cross section of the InP HEMT. Credit: Chalmers University of Technology

"Cooling the amplifier modules to -260 degrees Celsius enables them to operate with the highest signal-to-noise ratio possible today," says Jan Grahn, Professor of microwave technology at Chalmers. "These advanced cryogenic amplifiers are of tremendous significance for signal detection in many areas of science, ranging from quantum computers to radio astronomy."

Using a combination of measurements and simulations, the researchers investigated what happens when a microwave transistor is cooled to one tenth of a degree above absolute zero (-273 degrees Celsius). It was thought that noise in the transistor was limited by so-called hot electrons at such extreme temperatures. However, the new study shows that the noise is actually limited by self-heating in the transistor.


Self-heating is associated with phonon radiation in the transistor at very low temperatures. Phonons are quantum particles that describe the thermal conductivity of a material. The results of the study are based on experimental noise measurements and simulations of phonons and electrons in the semiconductor transistor at low temperatures.

The results of the study will be published in the journal Nature Materials.

This is a cross sectional image of an ultra-low noise transistor. Electrons, accelerated in the high mobility channel under the 100 nanometer gate, collide and dissipate heat that fundamentally limits the noise performance of the transistor. Credit: Lisa Kinnerud and Moa Carlsson, Krantz NanoArt.

"The study is important for the fundamental understanding of how a transistor operates close to absolute zero temperature, and also how we should design even more sensitive low-noise amplifiers for future detectors in physics and astronomy," explains Jan Grahn.

The research has been performed as part of an international exchange between Chalmers University of Technology in Sweden and the California Institute of Technology. Co-authors are the University of Salamanca and the Swedish company Low Noise Factory. The study was conducted at the Gigahertz Centre, a joint venture between Chalmers, research institutes, company partners and the Swedish Governmental Agency for Innovation Systems (Vinnova).

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