Direct write patterning of high-transition temperature (high- ) superconducting oxide thin films with a focused helium ion beam is a formidable approach for the scaling of high- circuit feature sizes down to the nanoscale. In this letter, we report using this technique to create a sensitive micro superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) magnetometer with a sensing area of about 100 × 100 m. The device is fabricated from a single 35-nm thick YBaCuO film. A flux concentrating pick-up loop is directly coupled to a 10 nm × 20 m nano-slit SQUID. The SQUID is defined entirely by helium ion irradiation from a gas field ion source. The irradiation converts the superconductor to an insulator, and no material is milled away or etched. In this manner, a very narrow non-superconducting nano-slit is created entirely within the plane of the film. The narrow slit dimension allows for maximization of the coupling to the field concentrator. Electrical measurements reveal a large 0.35 mV modulation with a magnetic field. We measure a white noise level of 2 Φ/Hz. The field noise of the magnetometer is 4 pT/Hz at 4.2 K.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6188902 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.5048776 | DOI Listing |
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