Abstract

We report on the development of a current amplifier for measuring small currents from mesoscopic electronic devices at low temperatures down to the milli-Kelvin range. In our setup, a superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) located at the mixing chamber stage of the dilution refrigerator is used as the first-stage current amplifier, thereby improving the noise floor down to 8 × 10−27 A2/Hz, which is one order of magnitude as low as those obtained by the conventional methods that utilize a semiconductor-based cryogenic current amplifier. We show the configuration of this setup and demonstrate the amplification of the current generated by a quantum point contact. This approach can open a new way to examine solid-state phenomena that are elusive owing to their small current.

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