Superconducting Quantum Amplifier-Integrator in Ultra-High Speed Continuous-time Delta-Sigma Converter
Debopam Banerjee

TL;DR
This paper introduces a superconducting quantum amplifier-integrator for ultra-high speed continuous-time delta-sigma converters, leveraging macroscopic quantum effects to achieve invariant gain and enhanced linearity in analog circuits.
Contribution
It presents a novel approach using superconductivity and quantum phenomena to design amplifiers and comparators, overcoming limitations of traditional semiconductor technologies.
Findings
Achieves gain invariant to process, temperature, and supply variations.
Resolves magnetic flux with a minimum of 2.07fT.
Embedded in delta-sigma loop, attains 100 times smaller resolution.
Abstract
Present semiconductor research is increasingly focusing on either higher speeds or higher linearity or both. Applications range from consumer, industrial, healthcare and military. Typically such circuits are fabricated in today's low-voltage CMOS processes using silicon and in few cases BJT-CMOS combined like Gallium-Arsenide or Indium-Phosphide. These technology nodes face a plethora of problems like reduction of dynamic range of the circuit due to mismatch, distortion, noise, thermal and electromigration issues due to excessive currents, etc. Compounding these problems is the issue with lower achievable gain from an amplifier which often gets limited due to lower supply voltages in such technology nodes. Slowly circuit techniques like chopping, cascoding, cascading and calibration are nearing their limits. In this paper we present a radically different approach to our regular analog…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnalog and Mixed-Signal Circuit Design · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Advancements in Semiconductor Devices and Circuit Design
