The Cryotron Superconductive Computer Component
The Cryotron Superconductive Computer Component
The Cryotron Superconductive Computer Component
Memorandum 6M-38U3
Page 1 of 16
To:
David R. Brown
From:
Dudley A. Buck
Date:
August 22,
Approval:
Torben H. Meisling
Abstract:
1.
Superconduc tivi ty
Page 2
Page 3
Static Characteristics
current.
Page h
rrd
oersteds
= 157.5 j
d mils
Current Gain
Memorandum 6M-38U3
I = Kd I
For a given pitch control winding and a given gate wire diameter, the
current gain i s specified. Figure 5 i s a plot of lines of constant K as
a function of winding pitch and gate wire diameter. For the cryotron
whose characteristics are plotted i n Figure U# K 7. The current
gain actually observed for a given cryotron i s often less than calculated,
presumably due to the constriction of supercurrents by small normal regions
which nucleate about flaws in the wire surface. Control-current threshold
points thus form a locus in the gate current-control current plane which
l i e s on an e l l i p s e of smaller major-to-minor axis r a t i o .
2.3
f Lc Ic
in
Page 6
g ii
,TT2
J 2R
1 / g\ g
f l l / L
fL I
* *0
c
c c
In the pulse circuits of section 3* the gate current of one
cryotron becomes the control current of another^ I I For this condition, the frequency at which the power gain becomes unity is:
max
R
L
c
= _
which is the reciprocal of the L/R time constant of the circuit. The L
and R are on different cryotrons, but since large numbers of identical
cryotrons are involved, one can speak of the L/R time constant of a given
cryotron as being the fundamental time constant of the circuitry.
If a given cryotron is made longer while holding the pitch of
the control winding constant, the resistance and inductance increase
together such that the l/R time constant is not affected. The L/R time
constant is thus independent of cryotron length.
If the diameter of a given cryotron is made smaller while
holding the pitch of the control winding constant, the resistance increases
inversely as the diameter squared, while the inductance decreases directly
as the diameter squared. The i/R time constant thus decreases as the
fourth power of the diameter.
The current gain of the cryotron drops if the diameter is made
smaller while holding the pitch of the control winding constant because
the current-carrying capacity of the gate circuit decreases directly with
the diameter. If the current gain is to be held constant by increasing the
pitch of the control winding proportionately as the diameter is made
smaller, the inductance remains constant and the L/R time constant decreases
as the square of the diameter. One thus pays rather dearly for current
gain. The circuits of section 3* below, are operated with a minimum of
excess current gain.
The resistivity of the normal state varies over several powers
of ten among the various superconductors. The L/R time constant varies
inversely as the resistivity. An increase in speed of circuit operation
can therefore be achieved by alloying superconductors to increase resistivity. 3
3. B. Serin, "The Magnetic Threshold Curve of Superconductors," Chapter VII
in Progress in Low-Temperature Physics, edited by C. J. Oorter,
Interscience Publishers, 195!>.
Page 7
T - const. K d . A
"e
/> U-H c )
where H is the external magnetic field, H is the threshold magnetic field
and / is the resistivity. The switching time varies directly as the square
of the diameter and inversely as the resistivity, and is a function of the
amount by which the threshold magnetic field is exceeded.
As the circuits of section 3 are speeded up by making cryotron
diameters smaller, there will be a speed range where eddy currents become
important. Lowering the diameter still further and increasing the pitch
proportionally should then increase the speed as the inverse square of the
diameter, since both circuit L/R time constants and eddy current time
constants decrease proportionally.
The observed time constants of the free-running multivibrator
of section 3 are of the same order of magnitude as the calculated L/R
circuit time constants. Eddy current effects should become important
during the next order of magnitude increase in speed.
The transition from normal to superconductor also involves delays
and a somewhat different switching mechanism.5*6 ^ supercooling effect is
important. A nucleus of superconducting material forms at one spot on the
wire surface, sweeps around the wire, and then grows along the wire. Extrapolation of slow velocity data on tin rods in fields just barely below
the threshold field indicate that in cryotron operation, velocities of
the order of tens of centimeters per microsecond ought to be encountered
I.
T. E. Faber, "The Phase Transition in Superconductors II. Phase Propagation above the Critical Field," Proceedings of the Royal Society, A,
219, P P . 75-88 (1953).
5.
6.
T. E. Faber, The Phase Transition in Superconductors III. Phase Propagation below the Critical Field,"Proceedings of the Royal Society, A,
223, PP. 17U-19U (195U).
Page 8
with a current gain of two. As soon as a superconducting path is established over the surface of the wire, the cryotron is in its superconducting
stateeven if the center of the wire requires additional time to become
superconducting. While it is not anticipated that this transition will
be a major source of delay, it is interesting to note that this delay is
one which depends on the length of the cryotron.
As circuit speeds are increased by increasing the resistance of
the central wire, thereby shortening l/R circuit time constants and
minimizing eddy current effects, a fundamental limit to the ultimate speed
exists in the form of relaxation losses. The exact frequency repion in
which these losses will become predominant is not known, but from experiments with superconducting coaxial cable and wave guide resonators, an
estimate is available which places the limit between 100 megacycles and
1P00 megacycles.
3.
The low impedance level of cryotron circuitry dictates a highimpedance power supply (current source) with circuit elements connected
in series. Each element allows the current a choice among two or more
paths only one of which is superconducting; all of the current flows
through the superconducting path. The current encounters zero back voltage
except when the paths are changing. The standby pcwer is therefore zero.
Several circuits, representative of those found in digital computers, are
described below.
3.1
Flip-Flop
Page 9
Multivibrator
etc*
etc.
etc.
Tabla T.
Sequence of M u l t i v i b r a t o r F l i p - F l o p S t a t e s
Page 10
The time taken for t r a n s i t i o n from one time period to the next
i s a f u n c t i o n of t h e t r a n s f e r c u r r e n t . I f t r a n s i t i o n occurs a t a fixed
t h r e s h o l d c u r r e n t v a l u e , the f i n a l value of the r i s i n g c u r r e n t i n a given
c o n t r o l winding determines t h e f r a c t i o n of the i / R time c o n s t a n t r e q u i r e d
to r e a c h t h a t t h r e s h o l d v a l u e . If the f i n a l value i s (a) times the
t h r e s h o l d v a l u e , t h e time r e q u i r e d to reach the t h r e s h o l d i s given by:
t i / R l n ( a / a - l ) . The p a r t i c u l a r m u l t i v i b r a t o r c i r c u i t d e s c r i b e d completes
the r o u n d - t r i p through i t s s i x time p e r i o d s a t t h e r a t e of 100 to 1,000
times p e r second depending on t r a n s f e r c u r r e n t . Hie higher frequency
gives i n d i v i d u a l time periods of 167 microseconds d u r a t i o n .
To monitor the t r a n s i t i o n s of one of the f l i p - f l o p s , an a d d i t i o n a l
c r y o t r o n gate i s added with i t s c o n t r o l winding i n s e r i e s with one side
of t h e f l i p - f l o p .
A c u r r e n t source i s connected t o i t s g a t e c i r c u i t . When
the c o n t r o l c u r r e n t i s z e r o , the gate c i r c u i t i s a superconductor and the
v o l t a g e i s zero. When the c o n t r o l c u r r e n t reaches the t h r e s h o l d value,
the ejate c i r c u i t becomes r e s i s t i v e and develops a v o l t a g e which i s amplif i e d and displayed. Typical values a r e : R c 0 . 0 1 ohm, I 100 ma;
V * 1 m i l l i v o l t . The tame c u r r e n t waveform i s n o t preserved by the
monitoring gate due t o i t s inherent n o n l i n e a r i t y p l u s the sharpening of
i t s t r a n s i t i o n due t o l2R h e a t i n g a s i t becomes r e s i s t i v e .
3.3
Multiterminal Switch
Binary Adder
Page 11
INPUT
B
CARRY
IN
1
0
1
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
Table n .
SUM
1
0
0
1
0
1
1
CARRY
OUT
1
M
INPUT
A
1
0
1
0
0
0
-J*
Page 12
Stepping R e g i s t e r
Coincident-Current C i r c u i t s
Page 13
Low-Tempera t u r e Environment
8.
Pressure
mom. Hg.
0.001
0.01
0.1
Page Hi
Temperature
degrees K
0.657
0.791
0.982
1.269
1.
10.
100.
200.
300.
3.067
3.368
Uoo.
5oo.
3.605
3.803
600.
700.
710.
3.975
U.127
1.71.3
2.638
u.ua
Table i n .
Pressure
num. Hg
720o
730.
7U0.
750.
760.
770.
780.
790.
800.
900.
1000.
1500.
1720.
Temperature
degrees K
U.156
li.170
U.18U
U.198
li.211
U.225
U.239
U.252
U.266
h.UO
li.52
5.03
5.20
U2 Physical Construction
Figure 15 shows some experimental cryotron c i r c u i t s . They are
mounted a t the ends of three-foot cupro-nickel tubes for immersion in
a liquid helium storage vessel. Power supply and signal wires come up
through the center of the tube. The experiments read chronologically from
the large probes on the r i g h t which were used for d-c characteristic
measurements to the three-flip-flop multivibrator c i r c u i t on the l e f t which
contains nineteen active elements. A closeup of the l a t t e r experiment i s
shown in Figure 16. The individual elements are those whose d-c cryotron
c h a r a c t e r i s t i c s are given by Figure U. Spotwelding has been used to i n t e r connect niobium and tantalum wires. Nickel lugs, while not superconducting, have proven useful for mounting. They both spotweld and solder nicely
and careful design minimizes the resistance they introduce. The f e a s i b i l i t y
of using superconductive etched-wiring boards i s under study. In these,
lead would form the superconductive paths.
Many materials are used in the construction of c i r c u i t s to operate
in liquid helium. Ordinary wire insulation (enamel, s i l k , glass, Formex,
Formvar, e t c . ) shows no sign of f a i l u r e after repeated immersion. One
experiment using wooden coil forms glued together with Duco Cement was
successful. Scotch Electrical Tape, while i t freezes, seems to hold well.
Commercially available feedthrough and standoff insulators have been used
without any sign of cracking. Metals in general are much stronger a t
Page 15
Conclusion
Signed
DAB/jg
4 m d U * c & & * 4 /
Drawings Attached:
Figure
Figure
Figure
Figure
Figure
Figure
Figure
Figure
Figure
Figure
Figure
Figure
Figure
Figure
Figure
Figure
1 - C-6333k
2 - A-63O87
3 - A-63088
h - B-63091
5 - B-63U9I
6 - A-63090
7 - C-6329U
8 - C-63291
9 - C-63293
10 - C-63292
11 - C-63338
12 - B-63335
13 - C-63336
lit - C-63337
15 - A-63679
16 - A-63678
Distribution List:
Group 63 Staff
Group 35 Staff
Group 65 Staff
M. A. Herlin - D-321
B. G. F a r l e y
R. P. Mayer
L. L. Sutro
R. F. Jenney
R. W. S i t t l e r
A. S h o r t e l l , B a r t a
Prof. W. K. L i n v i l l
Prof. S. C. C o l l i n s - U1-20U
Prof. J . B. Wiesner, 20A-122
Prof. R. M. Fano, 20A-118
Prof. S. J . Mason, 20A-118
Prof. A. R. von H i p p e l , h-2hk
Prof. S. H. Caldwell, IO-303A
Prof. R. H. F r a z i e r , 10-U03
Prof. T. S. Gray, U-212
Prof. A. Kusco, 10-159
Prof. R. M. Saunders, 10-198
Prof. R. B. Adler, 20A-118
Prof. A. B. Van Rennes, 3-U01
Prof. D. J. E p s t e i n , 20C-105
Prof. D. A. Huffman, 10-338
R. D. Thornton, 10-hUl
N. D e C l a r i s , li-232
A. Smakula, 20B-136
N. A l p e r i n , Barta
Page 16
1000
900
800
700
H c GAUSS
600
500
FIG. I
THRESHOLD
MAGNETIC
FIELD
400 30
vs TEMPERATURE 20
FOR SEVERAL
,oo
COMMON
2
SUPERCONDUCTORS
TEMPERATURE
6
K
NORMAL
REGION
SUPERCONDUCTING
REG I ON
4.2 K
FIG. 2
THRESHOLD
MAGNETIC
FIELD
AS
A
FUNCTION
OF
TEMPERATURE
FOR
A
SUPERCONDUCTOR
r\ \
nnnn
)
SINGLE
CRYOTRON
FIG. 3
CRYOTRON
BISTABLE
( F L I P - FLOP )
ELEMENT
SINGLE
LAYER
.003"
009"
nn
rj u
Ih
NIOBIUM
TANTALUM
.01
.0075-
9 .005 OHMS
.0025-
100
I
CRYOTRON GATE
vs. CONTROL
200
300
MILLIAMPERES
RES I STANCE
CURRENT
400
500
400 -
CONTROL
WINDING
PITCH r u
TURNS
PER INCH
300 -
200
100
CENTRAL
WIRE
DIAMETER ~
MILS
ZERO
9
INPUT
aana
ONE
SUPPLY
aaaa
a a Q-Q
INPUT
"D
"D
>
"D TJ TJ
"O
SUPPLY
a n JH n
{Iu u
D"
ONE
OUTPUT
1
H-Q
READ
FIG. G
CRYOTRON
F L I P - FLOP
CRYOTRONS
AND
RE A
nn na
CJ D" u u u
>
t
ZERO
OUTPUT
WITH
READ - IN
- OUT
CRYOTRONS
SUPPLY
I)
X
o-
ZERO
INPUTS
B
o-
ONE
NPUTS
)
")
SUPPLY
WITH
CRYOTRON FL I P - F L O P
OR GATES
IN BOTH SI DES
SUPPLY
(CD,
ZERO
INPUT
C
C
D
P
ONE
INPUT
D
D
C
C
I NPUT
'D
PULSE
SUPPLY
FlCi. U
WITH
CRYOTRON
FLIP-FLOP
AND
GATES
IN
ONE
S I DE
tr
ho
<
Q.
cr
DQ
>
CD
a.
o
_i
u.
i
0.
o
or
h-
o
>-
Q_
0.
o
i
C5 r- 2
rq vO (\J
nffln
vo N i
'
r'
_Q
r-C
S
n n
TD "O
o n
U"U
o n
era
1cnx
"O
era
v~o
Q Q
n n
CL
p_
T) TJ
U~U
_Q n
-o 6
~0~T7
Q Q
o 7
Crt7
J ^
CRYOTRON
- 3
-o 4
enr
o o
READ
8-POSITION
o~o
O Q
t3TD
a
wo
n n
era
^CONTROL
-o I
Crcr
n n
LTD
n n
era
p_
- o
-o 2
O- Q.
n.
cr
_Q JQ
LTU
Q-Q
O-
tro
_Q o
CL
I CONTROL
v
SWITCH
F-2973
SN-1224
SUM
FLIP-FLOP
CARRY
IN
CARRY
OUT
00
00
A INPUT
Oo
1 0
00
B INPUT
A= B = 0
?Q n a
oo
FIG. 12
CARRY
NETWORK
00
I CARRY OUT
J21
&
U~ CT
A=l
D-
>^X
m^iK
SUM
FLIPFLOP
B=0
* - -
L
0 CARRY OUT
^S^
B=0
r
u
B=
T7
B= l
-Q
A=l
/
Q,
i bB =y0 l
"O "O
A= B
A*B
BINARY
T7
ACCUMULATOR
STAGE
i
in
a o
T7
Hi
"cr
iO.
cr
^b^
cr
LU
K
CO
CD
LU
<
u_ cr
o
o
CO z
j LU
] o
<
h-
(X)
CL
Q_
LU
f-
co
TRO
o z
5
O
>-
cr
o
I t N fvj
S3
(^ O) - i
vO
1 (M
! 2
u h Go
FIG. 15
A-63678
FIG. 16
3-CRYOTRON-FLIP-FLOP MULTIVIBRATOR