Superconducting micro-resonators for electron spin resonance - the good, the bad, and the future #Instrumentation #EPR

Published: Monday, 14 February 2022 - 00:00 UTC

Author: Thorsten Maly

Artzi, Yaron, Yakir Yishay, Marco Fanciulli, Moamen Jbara, and Aharon Blank. “Superconducting Micro-Resonators for Electron Spin Resonance - the Good, the Bad, and the Future.” Journal of Magnetic Resonance 334 (January 2022): 107102.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmr.2021.107102.

The field of electron spin resonance (ESR) is in constant need of improving its capabilities. Among other things, this means having better resonators to reach improved spin sensitivity and enable larger microwave-power-to-microwave-magnetic-field conversion factors. Surface micro-resonators, made of small metallic patches on a dielectric substrate, provide very good absolute spin sensitivity and high conversion factors due to their very small mode volume. However, such resonators suffer from relatively low spin concentration sensitivity and a low-quality factor, a fact that offsets some of their significant potential advantages. The use of superconducting patches to replace the metallic layer seems a reasonable and straightforward solution to the quality factor issue, at least for measurements carried out at cryogenic temperatures. Nevertheless, superconducting materials, especially those that can operate at moderate cryogenic temperatures, are not easily incorporated into setups requiring high magnetic fields due to the electric current vortices generated in the latter’s surface. This makes the transition from normal conducting materials to superconductors highly nontrivial. Here we present the design, fabrication, and testing results of surface micro-resonators made of yttrium barium copper oxide (YBCO), a superconducting material that operates also at high magnetic fields and makes it possible to pursue ESR at moderate cryogenic temperatures (up to $ 80 K). We show that with a unique experimental setup, these resonators can be made to operate well even at high fields of $ 1.2 T. Furthermore, we analyze the effect of current vortices on the ESR signal and the spins’ coherence times. Finally, we provide a head-to-head comparison of YBCO vs copper resonators of the same dimensions, which clearly shows their pros and cons and directs us to future potential developments and improvements in this field.