Josephson junctions, first developed by B. D. Josephson, are
quantum-mechanical circuit
elements of superconducting devices. They are
most commonly used in SQUIDs and Rapid Single Flux Quantum integrated circuits.
A Josephson junction is the interface between two
superconducting materials separated by a
non-superconducting barrier. A current may flow freely within the
superconductors, but the barrier prevents the current from flowing
freely between them. However, the supercurrent may tunnel through the
barrier, depending on the quantum phase of the superconductors. The amount of supercurrent that may tunnel through the
barrier is restricted by the size and substance of the barrier. The
maximum value the supercurrent may attain is called the critical current
of the Josephson junction, and is an important phenomenological
parameter of a junction.
Josephson junctions have two basic electrical properties. The first is
that the junctions have an inductive reactance. That is,
similarly to inductors, the voltage difference across a junction is related to the time
rate of change of the current. The second is
that a constant voltage across a junction will produce an oscillating
current through the barrier, and vice versa. Thus, Josephson junctions
convert a direct-current voltage to an alternating-current current.
There are two general types of Josephson junctions: overdamped and
underdamped. In overdamped junctions, the barrier is conducting (normal metal or superconductor bridge).
The effects of the junction's internal electrical resistance will be
large compared to its small capacitance. An overdamped junction
will quickly reach a unique equilibrium state for any given set of
conditions. The barrier of an underdamped junction is an insulator. The effects of the junction's internal resistance
will be minimal. Underdamped junctions do not have unique equilibrium
states, but are hysteretic.