2 research outputs found
Cavity-Enhanced 2D Material Quantum Emitters Deterministically Integrated with Silicon Nitride Microresonators
Optically active defects in 2D materials, such as hexagonal
boron
nitride (hBN) and transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDs), are an
attractive class of single-photon emitters with high brightness, operation
up to room temperature, site-specific engineering of emitter arrays
with strain and irradiation techniques, and tunability with external
electric fields. In this work, we demonstrate a novel approach to
precisely align and embed hBN and TMDs within background-free silicon
nitride microring resonators. Through the Purcell effect, high-purity
hBN emitters exhibit a cavity-enhanced spectral coupling efficiency
of up to 46% at room temperature, exceeding the theoretical limit
(up to 40%) for cavity-free waveguide-emitter coupling and demonstrating
nearly a 1 order of magnitude improvement over previous work. The
devices are fabricated with a CMOS-compatible process and exhibit
no degradation of the 2D material optical properties, robustness to
thermal annealing, and 100 nm positioning accuracy of quantum emitters
within single-mode waveguides, opening a path for scalable quantum
photonic chips with on-demand single-photon sources
Demonstrating sub-3 ps temporal resolution in a superconducting nanowire single-photon detector
Improving the temporal resolution of single photon detectors has an impact on many applications, such as increased data rates and transmission distances for both classical and quantum optical communication systems, higher spatial resolution in laser ranging and observation of shorter-lived fluorophores in biomedical imaging. In recent years, superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors (SNSPDs) have emerged as the highest efficiency time-resolving single-photon counting detectors available in the near infrared. As the detection mechanism in SNSPDs occurs on picosecond time scales, SNSPDs have been demonstrated with exquisite temporal resolution below 15 ps. We reduce this value to 2.70.2 ps at 400 nm and 4.60.2 ps at 1550 nm, using a specialized niobium nitride (NbN) SNSPD. The observed photon-energy dependence of the temporal resolution and detection latency suggests that intrinsic effects make a significant contribution
