We demonstrate highly transparent silicon-vanadium and silicon-aluminum tunnel junctions with relatively low sub-gap leakage current and discuss how a trade-off typically encountered between transparency and leakage affects their refrigeration performance. We theoretically investigate cascaded superconducting tunnel junction refrigerators with two or more refrigeration stages. In particular, we develop an approximate method that takes into account self-heating effects but still allows us to optimize the cascade a single stage at a time. We design a cascade consisting of energy-efficient refrigeration stages, which makes cooling of, e.g., quantum devices from above 1 K to below 100 mK a realistic experimental target
We present experiments on a superconductor–normal-metal electron refrigerator in a regime where sing...
Refrigeration is an important enabler for quantum technology. The very low energy of the fundamental...
Modern science often requires measurements at sub-Kelvin temperatures. Temperatures of 300 mK can be...
We demonstrate highly transparent silicon-vanadium and silicon-aluminum tunnel junctions with relati...
Microrefrigerators that operate in the subkelvin regime are key devices in quantum technology. A wel...
This thesis presents a systematic study of electron cooling with Normal-metal/insulator/superconduct...
We propose a remarkably simple electronic refrigerator based on the Coulomb barrier for single-elect...
For scalable solid-state quantum technologies, there appears to be no alternative to the temperature...
We suggest and demonstrate experimentally that two normal metal/insulator/superconductor (NIS) tunne...
International audienceWhen biased at a voltage just below a superconductor's energy gap, a tunnel ju...
A biased tunnel junction between a superconductor and a normal metal can cool the latter electrode. ...
The control of electronic and thermal transport through material interfaces is crucial for numerous ...
AbstractWhen biased at a voltage just below a superconductor's energy gap, a tunnel junction between...
A normal-metal/insulator/superconductor (NIS) tunnel junction can be applied to cool electrons by bi...
We present an experimental realization of a Coulomb blockade refrigerator (CBR) based on a single-el...
We present experiments on a superconductor–normal-metal electron refrigerator in a regime where sing...
Refrigeration is an important enabler for quantum technology. The very low energy of the fundamental...
Modern science often requires measurements at sub-Kelvin temperatures. Temperatures of 300 mK can be...
We demonstrate highly transparent silicon-vanadium and silicon-aluminum tunnel junctions with relati...
Microrefrigerators that operate in the subkelvin regime are key devices in quantum technology. A wel...
This thesis presents a systematic study of electron cooling with Normal-metal/insulator/superconduct...
We propose a remarkably simple electronic refrigerator based on the Coulomb barrier for single-elect...
For scalable solid-state quantum technologies, there appears to be no alternative to the temperature...
We suggest and demonstrate experimentally that two normal metal/insulator/superconductor (NIS) tunne...
International audienceWhen biased at a voltage just below a superconductor's energy gap, a tunnel ju...
A biased tunnel junction between a superconductor and a normal metal can cool the latter electrode. ...
The control of electronic and thermal transport through material interfaces is crucial for numerous ...
AbstractWhen biased at a voltage just below a superconductor's energy gap, a tunnel junction between...
A normal-metal/insulator/superconductor (NIS) tunnel junction can be applied to cool electrons by bi...
We present an experimental realization of a Coulomb blockade refrigerator (CBR) based on a single-el...
We present experiments on a superconductor–normal-metal electron refrigerator in a regime where sing...
Refrigeration is an important enabler for quantum technology. The very low energy of the fundamental...
Modern science often requires measurements at sub-Kelvin temperatures. Temperatures of 300 mK can be...