C.C. Tsuei, J.R. Kirtley, et al.
Journal of Physics and Chemistry of Solids
Josephson latching logic devices can be powered by a bipolar trapezoidal waveform. Ideally, switched devices will always reset as the power supply reverses polarity. Under certain conditions, however, punchthrough can occur: a switched logic device fails to reset and proceeds into the next cycle in the nonzero voltage state. Original theory and experiment held that the punchthrough probability P should be identically zero provided the power supply transition time τ is greater than some critical value. The present experiment on a three-junction superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) demonstrates, as more recent theories and simulations predict, that there is an exponential tail of P(τ) rather than an abrupt cutoff. We also find P can be strongly modulated by a small dc in the control line over the SQUID.
C.C. Tsuei, J.R. Kirtley, et al.
Journal of Physics and Chemistry of Solids
M. Naor, C.D. Tesche, et al.
Applied Physics Letters
C.T. Chuang, B.S. Wu, et al.
BCTM 1993
Y.-K.-K. Fung, G.W. Gibson, et al.
IEEE TAS