Operation of a superconducting nanowire in two detection modes: KID and SPD
Edward Schroeder, Philip Mauskopf, Hamdi Mani, Sean Bryan, Karl K., Berggren, Di Zhu

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a superconducting nanowire capable of functioning as both a kinetic inductance detector and a single-photon detector, analyzing its performance in both modes with different biasing schemes.
Contribution
It introduces a dual-mode operation of a superconducting nanowire detector and compares the performance of AC and DC biasing modes for photon detection.
Findings
DC-biased SPD mode achieves higher sensitivity than AC-biased KID mode.
Resonator quality factors limit detection bandwidth to about 1 MHz.
Photon detection produces sharp voltage steps and ringdown signals.
Abstract
We present the performance of a superconducting nanowire that can be operated in two detection modes: i) as a kinetic inductance detector (KID) or ii) as a single-photon detector (SPD). Two superconducting nanowires developed for use as single-photon detectors (SNSPDs) are embedded as the inductive (L) component in resonant inductor/capacitor (LC) circuits coupled to a microwave transmission line. The capacitors are low loss commercial chip capacitors and limit the internal quality factor of the resonators to approximately . The resonator quality factor, , is dominated by the coupling to the feedline and limits the detection bandwidth to on the order of 1MHz. When operated in KID mode, the detectors are AC biased with tones at their resonant frequencies of 45.85 and 91.81MHz. In the low-bias, standard KID mode, a single photon produces a hot spot that does not…
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