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Phys. Rev. B 46, 5507–5522 (1992)

Thermal activation of a hysteretic dc superconducting quantum interference device from its different zero-voltage states

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Valérie Lefevre-Seguin, Emmanuel Turlot, Cristian Urbina, Daniel Esteve, and Michel H. Devoret
Service de Physique de l’Etat Condensé, Centre d’Etudes de Saclay, 91191 Gif-sur-Yvette, France

Received 4 May 1992; published in the issue dated 1 September 1992

We have measured the thermally-activated escape rate out of the zero-voltage state of hysteretic dc superconducting quantum interference devices (SQUID’s) at 4.2 K. We found evidence that the zero-voltage state of these SQUID’s is in general not unique, but can correspond instead to several metastable states. Each of these substates is associated with a given number of flux quanta trapped in the super-conducting loop of the SQUID’s. The existence of this multiplicity is a direct consequence of the two-dimensional character of the dc-SQUID dynamics. For a fixed external magnetic flux, each zero-voltage substate is characterized by a particular value of the critical current, the expression of which can be derived from the double-cosine tilted two-dimensional SQUID potential. Experimentally, we observed multiple peaks in the switching-current distribution. Each peak was assigned to a given zero-voltage substate and we measured the dependence of the associated critical currents on the external magnetic flux. A procedure was developed in order to select a given substate among the multiplicity of the zero-voltage state. This allowed a precise measurement of the lifetime of one preselected zero-voltage substate as a function of the barrier height. Good agreement with two-dimensional transition-state theory was obtained.

© 1992 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevB.46.5507
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevB.46.5507
PACS:
05.20.-y, 74.50.+r