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A design guideline, formula reference, and interactive calculator for superconducting transmission lines.

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Owner: C²LabUpdated: 2026-04-24

Superconducting Transmission-Line Guideline and Calculator ​

Overview ​

This page provides a combined design guideline, formula reference, and interactive calculator for superconducting transmission lines used in AQFP, SFQ, and related superconducting digital circuits.

The calculator implements a Chang-type closed-form analytical model that estimates per-unit-length inductance, capacitance, characteristic impedance, propagation velocity, and delay for a superconducting stripline or microstrip-like wiring layer. It is intended for:

  • Early-stage design — quickly estimating line parameters before layout
  • Layer-stack comparison — comparing BAS, COU, CTL, or custom layer definitions
  • Student training — understanding how geometry, penetration depth, and dielectric properties interact
  • Approximate delay / impedance budgeting — e.g., checking whether a long control line adds unacceptable delay

What this tool is for

First-order analytical estimation for design exploration and education.

What this tool is NOT

A replacement for field-solver-based EM extraction. For final layout sign-off, always use an EM simulator (e.g. Sonnet, FastHenry, or the extraction step in your process PDK).


When to Use This Tool ​

Use caseAppropriate?
Quick impedance estimate for a new layerāœ… Yes
Comparing two wiring options at early design stageāœ… Yes
Rough delay budget for a long control lineāœ… Yes
Sign-off extraction for tapeoutāŒ No — use EM solver
Coupled-line / differential-pair analysisāŒ No — single-line model only
Lossy or high-frequency (> 100 GHz) behaviorāŒ No — TEM model only

Physical Meaning of the Parameters ​

Geometry parameters ​

  ā”Œā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”  ← upper conductor (width W, thickness t₁, λ₁)
  ā””ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”˜
  ╔══════════════════════╗  ← dielectric (height h, relative permittivity εᵣ)
  ā•šā•ā•ā•ā•ā•ā•ā•ā•ā•ā•ā•ā•ā•ā•ā•ā•ā•ā•ā•ā•ā•ā•ā•
  ā”Œā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”  ← ground plane (thickness tā‚‚, λ₂)
  ā””ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”€ā”˜
SymbolMeaningTypical range
WLine width1–10 μm
hDielectric thickness between line and ground plane0.1–2 μm
t₁Upper conductor (signal line) thickness0.1–0.5 μm
tā‚‚Ground-plane thickness0.2–0.5 μm
λ₁London penetration depth of upper conductorā‰ˆ 0.08–0.25 μm (NbN, Nb, Al)
λ₂London penetration depth of ground planeā‰ˆ 0.08–0.25 μm
εᵣRelative dielectric constant of insulatorā‰ˆ 4.0 (SiOā‚‚), ā‰ˆ 9.8 (Siā‚ƒNā‚„)

Why the London penetration depth matters ​

In ordinary (non-superconducting) microstrip, the magnetic field is excluded from the metal surfaces immediately. In a superconductor, the magnetic field actually penetrates a short distance Ī» into the conductor — the London penetration depth.

This extra field penetration adds an additional inductive contribution beyond the geometric (dielectric-space) term:

L=μ0Wā‹…K[h+Ī»1coth(t1Ī»1)+Ī»2coth(t2Ī»2)]

For very thick conductors (t/Ī» >> 1), coth(t/Ī») → 1 and the penetration term reduces to simply Ī». For thin films (t/Ī» ~ 1), coth(t/Ī») is appreciably larger than 1, meaning the inductance increases noticeably.

Consequence for design: ground planes or signal layers that are only a few times thicker than Ī» will increase the line inductance. For typical Nb-based processes with Ī» ā‰ˆ 80 nm and t ā‰ˆ 300–500 nm, t/Ī» ā‰ˆ 3.75–6.25, so coth(t/Ī») ā‰ˆ 1.001–1.000. The penetration correction is small but non-zero in this regime, and it becomes significant for processes with larger Ī» (e.g., NbN or AlN-barrier junctions).


Interactive Calculator ​

This calculator estimates the per-unit-length inductance and capacitance of superconducting transmission lines using a Chang-type analytical model. It includes a fringing-field correction factor K that accounts for finite conductor thickness and provides reasonable accuracy even for moderately narrow lines (W/h ≄ 1).

The calculator is meant to be read together with the model notes and source literature below, not used as a black-box numerical widget.

Process & Line Preset

Process:Chang Spreadsheet Default
Line type:

BAS — Base-layer stripline

Geometry

Material Parameters

Model Options

The original spreadsheet uses h rather than tā‚‚ in the lower-conductor penetration term. For the provided default parameters the numerical difference is very small (BAS: no difference because h = tā‚‚; COU: L increases by ā‰ˆ 0.010 % when corrected; CTL: ā‰ˆ 0.007 %). The corrected model is recommended for new process definitions where tā‚‚ ≠ h.

Results

K (Chang geometry factor)1.245—
εᵣₑ (effective dielectric)4.0000—
L — inductance / length0.09679pH/μm
C — capacitance / length0.7055fF/μm
Zā‚€ — characteristic impedance11.71Ī©
v — propagation velocity1.21e+8m/s
Total L (for l = 5 μm)0.4840pH
Total C (for l = 5 μm)0.003527pF
Total propagation delay0.04132ps
Delay per unit length0.008264ps/μm
Delay per 40 μm0.3305ps/40 μm

Model Validity

W/h = 16.0W/t₁ = 16.0W/λ₁ = 60.0tā‚‚/λ₂ = 3.75

HIGH High — wide-line conditions satisfied; analytical result is expected to be reliable.

High: W/h ≄ 10, W/t₁ ≄ 10, W/λ₁ ≄ 10 — wide-line approximation is likely reasonable.

Medium: W/h ≄ 1 but one or more conditions not met — first-order estimate, field-solver validation recommended.

Low: W/h < 1 — outside the preferred range of the analytical model.


Formula Summary ​

1. Chang Geometry Factor K ​

The factor K accounts for the fringing fields at the edges of the conductor. For a physical conductor of finite width W and thickness t₁ above a ground plane at distance h, the electromagnetic field spreads slightly beyond the geometric width. This effectively widens the conductor to WĀ·K, increasing capacitance and decreasing inductance relative to a zero-thickness parallel-plate approximation.

K=W+2ΔW=1+achWtanh(bct1h)

Reference

Primary model: W. H. Chang, ā€œThe inductance of a superconducting strip transmission lineā€, Journal of Applied Physics 50(12), 8129-8134, 1979. This is the main analytical reference behind the stripline inductance model used here. Chang's paper explicitly treats finite-width superconducting strip transmission lines and reports good accuracy when W/h is larger than approximately unity.

where ac=4.226 and bc=1.64 are constants calibrated against the original Chang spreadsheet (see Notes on the Original Spreadsheet).

Intermediate geometry variables computed during K evaluation:

VariableFormulaDescription
W/hW/hAspect ratio
t₁/ht₁/hConductor thickness ratio
β1 + t₁/hEffective height ratio
p(W/h) / βReduced width
Ī”(a_c/2)Ā·hĀ·tanh(b_cĀ·t₁/h)Per-edge fringing width
K(W + 2Ī”)/WEffective width ratio

2. Inductance per Unit Length ​

Full Chang expression (recommended):

L=μ0Wā‹…K{h+Ī»1[coth(t1Ī»1)+rb2p\csch(t1Ī»1)]+Ī»2coth(t2Ī»2)}

Reference

Model scope: Chang's 1979 stripline expression is the right first-order model for a single finite-width superconducting line over a reference plane. Once the routing geometry stops looking like that idealized cross-section, move to extraction-based tools and measured-process data instead of extending the closed form too far.

Wide-line approximation (csch term → 0 when t₁/λ₁ >> 1):

Lā‰ƒĪ¼0Wā‹…K[h+Ī»1coth(t1Ī»1)+Ī»2coth(t2Ī»2)]

For the default parameters (t₁/λ₁ ā‰ˆ 3.75–6.25), the difference between the full and wide-line expressions is less than 0.1 %.

3. Capacitance per Unit Length ​

C=ε0εrehā‹…Wā‹…K

Note the symmetry: K appears in the numerator of C and the denominator of L, so it simultaneously increases capacitance and decreases inductance.

4. Effective Dielectric Constant (for CTL / microstrip-like lines) ​

For stripline-like layers (signal conductor sandwiched between two ground planes), εre=εr.

For microstrip-like control lines (CTL), where the field extends partly into air, an effective dielectric constant is used. The Hammerstad & Jensen quasi-TEM formula is:

εre=εr+12+εrāˆ’12(1+10u)āˆ’ab

Reference

Background for CTL lines: E. Hammerstad and O. Jensen, ā€œAccurate Models for Microstrip Computer-Aided Designā€, 1980 IEEE MTT-S International Microwave Symposium Digest. The CTL effective dielectric constant here follows the standard Hammerstad-Jensen microstrip background model, adapted as a quasi-TEM approximation for microstrip-like superconducting control lines.

where u=W/h and the correction terms are:

a(u)=1+149lnu4+(u/52)2u4+0.432+118.7ln[1+(u18.1)3]b(εr)=0.564(εrāˆ’0.9εr+3)0.053

For CTL with W = 1.5 μm, h = 1.2 μm, εᵣ = 4.0 (u = 1.25): εᵣₑ ā‰ˆ 2.9596.

5. Characteristic Impedance and Propagation Velocity ​

Z0=LC,v=1LC

6. Propagation Delay ​

For line length l:

T=lv

Display:

QuantityFormula
Total delay [ps]T [ps] = (l [m] / v [m/s]) Ɨ 10¹²
Delay per μm [ps/μm]T / l [μm]
Delay per 40 μm [ps/40 μm](T / l) Ɨ 40

Model Validity and Warnings ​

ConditionThresholdMeaning
W/h≄ 10Wide-line regime; edge effects are small
W/t₁≄ 10Conductor is much wider than it is thick
W/λ₁≄ 10Width is much larger than penetration depth
tā‚‚/λ₂≄ 3Ground plane is sufficiently thick

Validity levels ​

  • High — all four conditions satisfied. Analytical result is expected to be reliable for most design purposes.
  • Medium — W/h ≄ 1 but one or more conditions not met. The result is useful as a first-order estimate; field-solver validation is recommended before final layout.
  • Low — W/h < 1. The conductor is narrower than the dielectric gap. The parallel-plate assumption breaks down; fringing dominates and the analytical formula is unreliable.

CTL-specific note ​

For the CTL default (W = 1.5 μm, h = 1.2 μm), W/h = 1.25. This is in the medium validity regime. Strong fringing fields are expected; the result is a first-order estimate and εᵣₑ is computed using an effective dielectric model. EM-solver validation is particularly recommended for CTL if precise delay values are needed.

Validation literature

For measured Nb-process context, see S. K. Tolpygo et al., ā€œInductance of Circuit Structures for MIT LL Superconductor Electronics Fabrication Process With 8 Niobium Layersā€, IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity 25(3), 1100905, 2015, and S. K. Tolpygo et al., ā€œInductance of superconductor integrated circuit features with sizes down to 120 nmā€, Superconductor Science and Technology 34(8), 085005, 2021. These papers show where simple stripline / microstrip intuition continues to work and where modern multilayer-process details, vias, ground perforations, and submicron features require calibrated extraction.


Notes on the Original Spreadsheet ​

Legacy vs. corrected lower-conductor term ​

The theoretical formula for line inductance contains the ground-plane penetration term:

λ2coth(t2λ2)

The original Excel spreadsheet appears to use h in place of tā‚‚:

λ2coth(hλ2)(legacy Excel mode)

For the default process parameters, the numerical difference is very small:

Layertā‚‚ (μm)h (μm)Ī” in L (corrected vs legacy)
BAS0.30.30.000 % (tā‚‚ = h)
COU0.30.7ā‰ˆ + 0.010 %
CTL0.31.2ā‰ˆ + 0.007 %

The reason the difference is so small is that tā‚‚/λ₂ = 3.75 for the defaults, making coth(tā‚‚/λ₂) ā‰ˆ 1.000067 ā‰ˆ 1. Both coth(tā‚‚/λ₂) and coth(h/λ₂) are extremely close to 1.

Recommendation: use the corrected formula for any process definition where tā‚‚ ≠ h, or where the ground-plane thickness tā‚‚ is less than ~3λ₂.

K factor calibration ​

The fringing correction factor K was calibrated to reproduce the original spreadsheet outputs for all three default line types to within ±0.03 %. The calibration constants (ac=4.226, bc=1.64) were found by fitting the formula K=1+ac(h/W)tanh⁔(bct1/h) to the three data points. If you have access to the original Chang (1979) ITED paper or the exact spreadsheet cell formulas, the calculateChangGeometry() function in TransmissionLineCalculator.vue can be updated to reproduce the intermediate variables precisely.


Regression Reference ​

These expected outputs are reproduced by the calculator (Legacy Excel mode). Use them to verify that any code changes do not break the numerical results.

BAS — Base-layer stripline ​

ParameterExpected
Kā‰ˆ 1.2448
Lā‰ˆ 0.0968 pH/μm
Cā‰ˆ 0.7054 fF/μm
Zā‚€ā‰ˆ 11.72 Ī©
vā‰ˆ 1.210 Ɨ 10⁸ m/s
Delay (l = 5 μm)ā‰ˆ 0.0413 ps
Total Lā‰ˆ 0.484 pH
Total Cā‰ˆ 0.00353 pF

COU — Counter-layer / coupling line ​

ParameterExpected
Kā‰ˆ 1.7443
Lā‰ˆ 0.2137 pH/μm
Cā‰ˆ 0.2559 fF/μm
Zā‚€ā‰ˆ 28.89 Ī©
vā‰ˆ 1.352 Ɨ 10⁸ m/s
Delay (l = 7.95 μm)ā‰ˆ 0.0588 ps
Total Lā‰ˆ 1.699 pH
Total Cā‰ˆ 0.00203 pF

CTL — Control / microstrip-like line ​

ParameterExpected
Īµįµ£ā‚‘ā‰ˆ 2.9596
Kā‰ˆ 3.0183
Lā‰ˆ 0.3775 pH/μm
Cā‰ˆ 0.0989 fF/μm
Zā‚€ā‰ˆ 61.79 Ī©
vā‰ˆ 1.637 Ɨ 10⁸ m/s
Delay (l = 1000 μm)ā‰ˆ 6.109 ps
Total Lā‰ˆ 377.5 pH
Total Cā‰ˆ 0.0989 pF

A suggested flow for estimating transmission-line parameters for a new process layer:

  1. Identify the layer type — is this a buried stripline (BAS/COU style) or a microstrip-like control layer (CTL style)?
  2. Enter process geometry — obtain W, h, t₁, tā‚‚ from the process design kit (PDK) design rules.
  3. Enter material properties — Ī» (from published values or wafer measurements) and εᵣ (from the PDK dielectric stack).
  4. Select model mode — use "Corrected Chang formula" for new process definitions; use "Legacy Excel" only when reproducing historical data.
  5. Check validity — review the W/h, W/t₁, W/λ₁, tā‚‚/λ₂ ratios. If W/h < 2, treat the result as a first-order estimate.
  6. Read results — record L [pH/μm], C [fF/μm], Zā‚€, and delay per μm.
  7. Validate with EM solver — for any line used in a critical path (JJ bias, PTL segment, clock driver output), verify with a 2D cross-section EM solver before tapeout.

Limitations ​

  1. Single-conductor model — does not handle coupled lines, differential pairs, or shielded structures.
  2. Uniform cross-section — assumes the cross-section is constant along the line. Effects of bends, vias, or tapers are not modelled.
  3. TEM / quasi-TEM only — valid at low frequencies where the transverse dimensions are much smaller than Ī»_electromagnetic. Not valid for millimetre-wave or sub-THz operation where dispersion is important.
  4. Homogeneous ground plane — assumes a single, uniform ground plane. Multi-layer ground structures require a more detailed model or EM simulation.
  5. No loss model — quasiparticle loss, surface resistance, and substrate loss are not included. For resonator Q-factor calculations, use a full complex-impedance model.
  6. Fringing factor calibration — the K factor is calibrated against three preset data points. For process parameters significantly outside the BAS/COU/CTL range (e.g., W/h > 30 or W/h < 0.5), the result should be treated with additional caution.

Why full extraction becomes necessary

For multilayer layouts with vias, return-current crowding, nearby ground cuts, coupling, bias feeds, and stacked routing, closed-form single-line formulas stop being the controlling model. See C. Fourie, N. Takeuchi, and N. Yoshikawa, ā€œInductance and Current Distribution Extraction in Nb Multilayer Circuits with Superconductive and Resistive Componentsā€, IEICE Transactions on Electronics E99-C(6), 683-691, 2016, for why full current-distribution extraction is needed in realistic Nb multilayer ICs. For broader tool-chain context, see C. J. Fourie, ā€œElectronic Design Automation tools for superconducting circuitsā€, Journal of Physics: Conference Series 1590, 012040, 2020.


Key References ​


C²Lab Internal Wiki — For lab members only.