Different Single-Photon Response of Wide and Narrow Superconducting MoxSi1-x Strips

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Abstract

The photon count rate (PCR) of superconducting single-photon detectors made of MoxSi1-x films shaped as a 2-μm-wide strip and a 115-nm-wide meander strip line is studied experimentally as a function of the dc biasing current at different values of the perpendicular magnetic field. For the wide strip, a crossover current Icross is observed, below which the PCR increases with an increasing magnetic field and above which it decreases. This behavior contrasts with the narrow MoxSi1-x meander, for which no crossover current is observed, thus suggesting different photon-detection mechanisms in the wide and narrow strips. Namely, we argue that in the wide strip the absorbed photon destroys superconductivity locally via the vortex-antivortex mechanism for the emergence of resistance, while in the narrow meander superconductivity is destroyed across the whole strip line, forming a hot belt. Accordingly, the different photon-detection mechanisms associated with vortices and the hot belt determine the qualitative difference in the dependence of the PCR on the magnetic field.

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Korneeva, Y. P., Manova, N. N., Florya, I. N., Mikhailov, M. Y., Dobrovolskiy, O. V., Korneev, A. A., & Vodolazov, D. Y. (2020). Different Single-Photon Response of Wide and Narrow Superconducting MoxSi1-x Strips. Physical Review Applied, 13(2). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevApplied.13.024011

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