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SIS mixers for 1mm band A. Navarrini, G. Engargiola, R. Plambeck (Berkeley) N. Wadefalk (Caltech)

SIS mixers for 1mm band A. Navarrini, G. Engargiola, R. Plambeck (Berkeley) N. Wadefalk (Caltech). short term: increase bandwidth of existing BIMA mixers to 4 GHz long term: develop new generation of 1mm mixers using UVa SIS mixers. Current BIMA 1mm receivers. DSB, fixed-tuned SIS mixers

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SIS mixers for 1mm band A. Navarrini, G. Engargiola, R. Plambeck (Berkeley) N. Wadefalk (Caltech)

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  1. SIS mixers for 1mm bandA. Navarrini, G. Engargiola, R. Plambeck (Berkeley)N. Wadefalk (Caltech) • short term: increase bandwidth of existing BIMA mixers to 4 GHz • long term: develop new generation of 1mm mixers using UVa SIS mixers

  2. Current BIMA 1mm receivers • DSB, fixed-tuned SIS mixers • single SIS junction devices fabricated by G. Engargiola at U. Illinois • 800 MHz IF band, 1.4 - 2.2 GHz (limited by IF amp)

  3. DSB receiver temperatures ~ 50 to 80 K(measured outside dewar, including all optics losses) 5.5 K 4.5 K 3.6 K

  4. Need to replace narrowband IF amplifier • ALMA solution is to build I.F. amplifier from discrete transistors • more flexibility in matching impedance of SIS junction • our preferred solution is to use InP MMIC • WBA13, developed by Weinreb and Wadefalk for ATA • 35 dB gain, noise temp 3-6 K • 10-20 mW power dissipation

  5. Comparison of amplifier gains, noise temperatures ALMA Band 6 amplifier, designed for 4-12 GHz WBA13 MMIC, designed for 0.5-11.5 GHz Gene Lauria, ALMA Band 6 PDR, Apr 2004 Wadefalk and Weinreb

  6. Option 1: replace amplifier on 12 K stage with MMIC module (WBA13 amplifier module provided by N. Wadefalk)

  7. Option 1: Trcvr DSB measured with 0-6 GHz I.F. filtercomparable to narrowband results

  8. Option 1: gain and noise from 0-9 GHzripple tolerable from 225-240 GHz, bad outside this range 225 GHz 260 GHz

  9. Option 2: integrate MMIC directly into mixer block • MMIC tended to oscillate; had to switch from WBA13 to lower-gain WBA12 • mixer block at 4.65 K instead of 3.85 K • gain ripple still a problem

  10. Option 3: incorporate pre-packaged WBA13 (ATA module) into thermally-split block 12 K 3.8 K

  11. Option 3: DSB noise temperatures 0-6 GHz I.F. filter

  12. Option 3: gain, noise from 0-6 GHz (ripple much improved, but gain falls off above 3 GHz) 225 GHz 260 GHz

  13. broadening bandwidth of BIMA 1mm mixers to 4 GHz: short term solutions if we must have 4 GHz bandwidth by Fall 2005, option 1 probably is best

  14. Longer term • goal: DSB Trcvr = 25 K, 8 GHz I.F. bandwidth • switch to ALMA Band 6 devices • we have only ~50 usable UI junctions • NRAO has contracted for 9 UVa wafers, each with 1066 devices (9600 devices); approx 50% are usable • if necessary, we could contract with UVa for an additional wafer • construct thermally split block with WBA13 IF amp • operating WBA13 at 12 K reduces heat load on 4 K refrig, may also improve 1/f gain stability of MMIC

  15. ALMA Band 6 SIS devices • DSB Trcvr ~ 20 K • series array of 4 junctions – avoids problems with saturation, but requires more LO pwr Tony Kerr has given us 4 ALMA devices to try

  16. ALMA is building sideband separating mixers, but we would use devices as DSB mixers • sideband separation requires complex mixer block, carefully phase-matched preamps • NRAO estimates ~25% acceptance rate for ALMA mixers from ALMA Band 6 PDR, Apr 2004

  17. ALMA sideband separating mixer blockwith attached preamps

  18. Sensitivity comparisons

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