Abstract

The use of quasiparticle diffusion in a superconducting film has the potential to allow an increase in the size of a cryogenic detector without proportional loss of energy resolution. The quasiparticle lifetime and the diffusion constant are critical parameters which have limited this development. Using W superconducting phase transition thermometers as the sensors and a W/Al bilayer as the diffusion film, we have measured quasiparticle diffusion over a distance of 2 mm and deduced a diffusion constant of D=2.5×10 −4 m 2/ s and a quasiparticle lifetime of τ=9.0 ms , which is, to our knowledge, by far the longest ever observed. With Ir/Au thermometers and an Ir/Au/Al diffusion film we found D=4.6×10 −3 m 2/ s and τ=0.43 ms with diffusion over 4 mm , the longest distance observed to date.

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