M.B. Ketchen, C.J. Anderson
Applied Physics Letters
This paper describes the electrical design and evaluation of the Josephson cross-sectional model (CSM) experiment. The experiment served as a test vehicle to verify the operation at liquid-helium temperatures of Josephson circuits integrated in a package environment suitable for high-performance digital applications. The CSM consisted of four circuit chips assembled on two cards in a three-dimensional card-on-board package. The chips (package) were fabricated in a 2.5-μm (5-μm) minimum linewidth Pb-alloy technology. A hierarchy of solder and pluggable connectors was used to attach the parts together and to provide electrical interconnections between parts. A data path which simulated a jump control sequence and a cache access in each machine cycle was successfully operated with cycle times down to 3.7 ns. The CSM incorporated the key components of the logic, power, and package of a prototype Josephson signal processor and demonstrated the feasibility of making such a processor with a sub-4-ns cycle time.
M.B. Ketchen, C.J. Anderson
Applied Physics Letters
C.J. Anderson, M.B. Ketchen
IEEE Transactions on Magnetics
C.J. Anderson
GaAs IC 1985
J.R. Kirtley, M.B. Ketchen, et al.
Applied Physics Letters