We investigate the dynamics of individual quasiparticle excitations on a small superconducting aluminum island connected to normal metallic leads by tunnel junctions. We find the island to be free of excitations within the measurement resolution. This allows us to show that the residual heating, which typically limits experiments on superconductors, has an ultralow value of less than 0.1 aW. By injecting electrons with a periodic gate voltage, we probe electron-phonon interaction and relaxation down to a single quasiparticle excitation pair, with a measured recombination rate of 16 kHz. Our experiment yields a strong test of BCS theory in aluminum as the results are consistent with it without free parameters.
The Electron Counting Capacitance Standard currently pursued at PTB aims to close the Quantum Metrological Triangle with a final precision of a few parts in 10 7 . This paper reports the considerable progress recently achieved with a new generation of single-electron tunnelling devices. A five-junction R-pump was operated with a relative charge transfer error of five electrons in 10 7 , and was used to successfully perform single-electron charging of a cryogenic capacitor. The preliminary result for the single-electron charge quantum has an uncertainty of less than two parts in 10 6 and is consistent with the value of the elementary charge.
We report on the operation of a single-electron pump (comprising three Al/AlOx/Al tunnel junctions and two gates) connected to the bias electrodes through the compact on-chip Cr resistors, R≈60 kΩ>Rk=h/e2≈26 kΩ. The function of the resistors in this so-called R pump was to suppress electron cotunneling, the process which otherwise severely deteriorates the performance of few-junction single-electron devices. When a harmonic ac drive of frequency f of several MHz was applied to the gates, the current–voltage curve of the R pump exhibited remarkably horizontal current steps at I=ef. We show that the use of the resistors is capable of substantially increasing the accuracy of the pump in comparison to operation of the pump without resistors.
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