We are developing a Lumped Element Kinetic Inductance Detector (LEKID) array
able to operate in the W-band (75-110 GHz) in order to perform ground-based
Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) and mm-wave astronomical observations. The
W-band is close to optimal in terms of contamination of the CMB from Galactic
synchrotron, free-free, and thermal interstellar dust. In this band, the
atmosphere has very good transparency, allowing interesting ground-based
observations with large (>30 m) telescopes, achieving high angular resolution
(<0.4 arcmin). In this work we describe the startup measurements devoted to the
optimization of a W-band camera/spectrometer prototype for large aperture
telescopes like the 64 m SRT (Sardinia Radio Telescope). In the process of
selecting the best superconducting film for the LEKID, we characterized a 40 nm
thick Aluminum 2-pixel array. We measured the minimum frequency able to break
CPs (i.e. hν=2Δ(Tc)=3.5kBTc) obtaining ν=95.5
GHz, that corresponds to a critical temperature of 1.31 K. This is not suitable
to cover the entire W-band. For an 80 nm layer the minimum frequency decreases
to 93.2 GHz, which corresponds to a critical temperature of 1.28 K; this value
is still suboptimal for W-band operation. Further increase of the Al film
thickness results in bad performance of the detector. We have thus considered a
Titanium-Aluminum bi-layer (10 nm thick Ti + 25 nm thick Al, already tested in
other laboratories), for which we measured a critical temperature of 820 mK and
a cut-on frequency of 65 GHz: so this solution allows operation in the entire
W-band.Comment: 16th International Workshop on Low Temperature Detectors, Grenoble
20-24 July 2015, Journal of Low Temperature Physics, Accepte