Controlling the recovery time of the superconducting nanowire single-photon detector with a voltage-controlled cryogenic tunable resistor
Hui Wang, Nikita Dmitrievic Orlov, Niels Noordzij, Thomas Descamps, J. W. Niels Los, Val Zwiller, Iman Esmaeil Zadeh

TL;DR
This paper introduces a cryogenically tunable resistor to optimize SNSPD recovery time, achieving over twice the detection rate and efficiency without latching issues, advancing single-photon detection technology.
Contribution
The study presents a novel cryogenic tunable resistor technology for optimizing SNSPD recovery time, maintaining efficiency and preventing latching, which was not achievable with previous passive resistor networks.
Findings
Over 2-fold increase in maximum detection rates.
Detection rates up to 120 Mcps without efficiency loss.
Maintained internal detection efficiency at high photon fluxes.
Abstract
Superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors (SNSPD), owing to their unique performance, are currently the standard detector in most demanding single-photon experiments. One important metric for any single-photon detector is the deadtime (or recovery time), defined as the minimum temporal separation between consecutive detection events. In SNSPDs, the recovery time is more subtle, as the detection efficiency does not abruptly drop to zero when the temporal separation between detection events gets smaller, instead, it increases gradually as the SNSPD current recovers. SNSPD's recovery time is dominated by its kinetic inductance, the readout impedance, and the degree of saturation of internal efficiency. Decreasing the kinetic inductance or increasing the readout impedance can accelerate the recovery process. Significant reduction of the SNSPD recovery time, by, for example, adding a…
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