Rapid single flux quantum
In electronics, rapid single flux quantum (RSFQ) is a digital electronics technology that relies on quantum effects in superconducting devices, namely Josephson junctions, to process digital signals. Josephson junctions are the active elements for RSFQ electronics, like transistors are the active elements for semiconductor electronics. However, RSFQ is not a quantum computing technology in the traditional sense. Even so, RSFQ is very different from the traditional CMOS transistor technology used in every day computers:
- it is based on superconductors, so a cryogenic environment is required;
- the digital information is carried by magnetic flux quanta that are produced by Josephson junctions instead of transistors in semiconductor electronics;
- the magnetic flux quanta are carried by picosecond-duration voltage pulses that travel on superconducting transmission lines, instead of static voltage levels in semiconductor electronics.
- Consequently the area of the quantized voltage pulses that carry single magnetic flux quanta is constant. Depending on the parameters of the Josephson junctions, the pulses can be as narrow as 1 picosecond with an amplitude of about 2 mV, or broader (typically 5-10 picoseconds) with a lower amplitude;
- since pulses usually propagate on superconducting lines, their dispersion is limited and usually negligible if no spectral component of the pulse is above the frequency of the energy gap of the superconductor;
- in 2010, the typical values of the maximum pulse amplitude, usually called the IcRn product, is of the order of 0.5 to 1 mV. Rn is the normal resistance of the Josephson junction that generates the voltage pulses, while Ic is its critical current.
- In the case of pulses of 5 picoseconds, it is typically possible to clock the circuits at frequencies of the order of 100 GHz (one pulse every 10 picoseconds).
See also: Quantum flux parametron, a related digital logic technology.
Advantages
- Interoperable with CMOS circuitry, microwave and infrared technology
- Extremely fast operating frequency: from a few tens of gigahertz up to hundreds of gigahertz
- Low power consumption: about 100 000 times lower than CMOS semiconductors circuits
- Existing chip manufacturing technology can be adapted to manufacture RSFQ circuitry
- Good tolerance to manufacturing variations
- RSFQ circuitry is essentially self clocking, making asynchronous designs much more practical.
Disadvantages
Applications
References
- An introduction to the basics and links to further information at the State University of New York at Stony Brook.
- K.K. Likharev and V.K. Semenov, IEEE Trans. Appl. Supercond. 1 (1991), 3.
- A. H. Worsham, J. X. Przybysz, J. Kang, and D. L. Miller, "A single flux quantum cross-bar switch and demultiplexer," IEEE Trans. on Appl. Supercond., vol. 5, pp. 2996—2999, June 1995.
- Feasibility Study of RSFQ-based Self-Routing Nonblocking Digital Switches (1996)
- Design Issues in Ultra-Fast Ultra-Low-Power Superconductor Batcher-Banyan Switching Fabric Based on RSFQ Logic/Memory Family (1997)
- A Clock Distribution Scheme for Large RSFQ Circuits (1995)
- Josephson Junction Digital Circuits -- Challenges and Opportunities
External links