A self-referenced single-electron quantized-current source
Abstract
With the anticipated redefinition of the international system of units (SI) the base units will be linked to fundamental constants of nature [1]. As for the electrical base unit "Ampere", it will be linked to the elementary charge e, requiring a corresponding quantum standard [2, 3]. Many concepts for such a standard have been investigated [4-14] relying on controlling the time-dependent tunnelling of electrons. However, the stochastic nature of quantum mechanical tunnelling intrinsically evokes uncontrolled deviations from the nominally quantized current. Alternatively, the counting of electrons [15, 16] has been explored but is severely limited in current amplitude and uncertainty by the low detector bandwidth. The late M. Wulf proposed [17] that this fundamental problem of electrical quantum metrology could be overcome by combining serial single-electron pumps with charge detectors allowing the generation of a quantized current and the in-situ detection of its stochastic deviations. Here, we experimentally demonstrate such quantized-current generation with in-situ detection of tunnelling errors at low frequencies and a reduction of the total current uncertainty by more than one order of magnitude. After frequency scaling this should enable a validated primary standard for the redefined SI base unit Ampere.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.1312.5669,
title = {A self-referenced single-electron quantized-current source},
author = {Lukas Fricke and Michael Wulf and Bernd Kaestner and Frank Hohls and Philipp Mirovsky and Brigitte Mackrodt and Ralf Dolata and Thomas Weimann and Klaus Pierz and Uwe Siegner and Hans W. Schumacher},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1312.5669},
year = {2014}
}