Design and performance of dual-polarization lumped-element kinetic inductance detectors for millimeter-wave polarimetry
H. McCarrick, G. Jones, B. R. Johnson, M. H. Abitbol, P. A. R. Ade, S., Bryan, P. Day, T. Essinger-Hileman, D. Flanigan, H. G. Leduc, M. Limon, P., Mauskopf, A. Miller, C. Tucker

TL;DR
This paper presents the design, fabrication, and characterization of a 64-element dual-polarization LEKID array optimized for millimeter-wave CMB polarimetry, demonstrating high sensitivity, polarization purity, and multiplexing capability suitable for on-sky use.
Contribution
The study introduces the first dual-polarization LEKID array optimized for CMB polarimetry, with high internal quality factors and multiplexing performance.
Findings
Resonators have quality factors approaching 10^6.
Detectors are photon-noise limited above 1 pW.
Array demonstrates multiplexing factor of 128.
Abstract
Lumped-element kinetic inductance detectors (LEKIDs) are an attractive technology for millimeter-wave observations that require large arrays of extremely low-noise detectors. We designed, fabricated and characterized 64-element (128 LEKID) arrays of horn-coupled, dual-polarization LEKIDs optimized for ground-based CMB polarimetry. Our devices are sensitive to two orthogonal polarizations in a single spectral band centered on 150 GHz with . The mm square arrays are designed to be tiled into the focal plane of an optical system. We demonstrate the viability of these dual-polarization LEKIDs with laboratory measurements. The LEKID modules are tested with an FPGA-based readout system in a sub-kelvin cryostat that uses a two-stage adiabatic demagnetization refrigerator. The devices are characterized using a blackbody and a millimeter-wave source. The…
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