Kirill Shein (17951091)Ekaterina Zharkova (17951094)Mikhail Kashchenko (15348533)Anna Kolbatova (17951097)Anastasia Lyubchak (17951100)Leonid Elesin (17951103)Ekaterina Nguyen (17951106)Alexander Semenov (677092)Ilya Charaev (17951109)Andreas Schilling (56313)Gregory Goltsman (4180690)Kostya S. Novoselov (1299501)Igor Gayduchenko (17951112)Denis A. Bandurin (6315938)
The rapid development of infrared spectroscopy, observational astronomy, and scanning near-field microscopy has been enabled by the emergence of sensitive mid- and far-infrared photodetectors. Superconducting hot-electron bolometers (HEBs), known for their exceptional signal-to-noise ratio and fast photoresponse, play a crucial role in these applications. While superconducting HEBs are traditionally crafted from sputtered thin films such as NbN, the potential of layered van der Waals (vdW) superconductors is untapped at THz frequencies. Here, we introduce superconducting HEBs made from few-layer NbSe2 microwires. By improving the interface between NbSe2 and metal leads, we overcome impedance mismatch with RF readout, enabling large responsivity THz detection (0.13 to 2.5 THz) with a minimal noise equivalent power of 7 pW/ Hz and nanosecond-range response time. Our work highlights NbSe2 as a promising platform for HEB technology and presents a reliable vdW assembly protocol for custom bolometer production.
K. SheinEkaterina ZharkovaMikhail KashchenkoA. I. KolbatovaAnastasia LyubchakL. ElesinEkaterina NguyenA. SemenovIlya CharaevA. SchillingGregory GoltsmanKostya S. NovoselovIgor GayduchenkoD. A. Bandurin
Cliff ChenProtik DasEce AytanWeimin ZhouJustin HorowitzBiswarup SatpatiAlexander A. BalandinRoger K. LakePeng Wei
Nicola ParadisoAnh-Tuan NguyenKarl Enzo KlossChristoph Strunk
Jing-Jing XianCong WangZhimo ZhangLe QinWei JiFangchu ChenXuan LuoYuping SunWenhao ZhangYing‐Shuang Fu
Shuaishuai Yin (18451062)Renshu Wang (20725529)Lie Wang (117337)Yang Liu (4829)Chong Zhu (586798)Zhenjia Zhou (21580724)Qingqing Ji (1611898)Libo Gao (328908)Xuerong Liu (190284)