Superconductive Signal-Processing Circuits
Abstract
This work addresses new signal processing circuits using the special features of superconductivity. A novel flash-type analog-to-digital converter based on a comparator invented in the preceding contract period was demonstrated. The comparator was shown to be useful as a logic gate and an encoder was designed with it. A high-resolution delta-sigma analog-to-digital converter was devised with superconductive components in spite of the lack of an analog integrator in this technology. Positive theoretical results are being followed up experimentally. A simple flux-shuttle single-flux-quantum shift register was devised and several different readout schemes were studied. A six- bit-long version was successfully tested at 1 GHz. A decoder that takes in a five-bit word to select one of 32 output lines was completed. The design involved very tight limitations on current and power. The decoder was combined with a serial-to-parallel converter and operated at 2 GHz. A study of the appropriate architectures for various types of superconductive or Josephson digital technology was developed: an inductance-extraction program.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Aug 01, 1994
- Accession Number
- ADA285533
Entities
People
- Theodore Van Duzer
Organizations
- University of California, Berkeley