46 research outputs found
Enhanced spontaneous emission from quantum dots in short photonic crystal waveguides
We report a study of the quantum dot emission in short photonic crystal
waveguides. We observe that the quantum dot photoluminescence intensity and
decay rate are strongly enhanced when the emission energy is in resonance with
Fabry-Perot cavity modes in the slow-light regime of the dispersion curve. The
experimental results are in agreement with previous theoretical predictions and
further supported by three-dimensional finite element simulation. Our results
show that the combination of slow group velocity and Fabry-Perot cavity
resonance provides an avenue to efficiently channel photons from quantum dots
into waveguides for integrated quantum photonic applications.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
Gallium Arsenide (GaAs) Quantum Photonic Waveguide Circuits
Integrated quantum photonics is a promising approach for future practical and
large-scale quantum information processing technologies, with the prospect of
on-chip generation, manipulation and measurement of complex quantum states of
light. The gallium arsenide (GaAs) material system is a promising technology
platform, and has already successfully demonstrated key components including
waveguide integrated single-photon sources and integrated single-photon
detectors. However, quantum circuits capable of manipulating quantum states of
light have so far not been investigated in this material system. Here, we
report GaAs photonic circuits for the manipulation of single-photon and
two-photon states. Two-photon quantum interference with a visibility of 94.9
+/- 1.3% was observed in GaAs directional couplers. Classical and quantum
interference fringes with visibilities of 98.6 +/- 1.3% and 84.4 +/- 1.5%
respectively were demonstrated in Mach-Zehnder interferometers exploiting the
electro-optic Pockels effect. This work paves the way for a fully integrated
quantum technology platform based on the GaAs material system.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Waveguide single-photon detectors for integrated quantum photonic circuits
The generation, manipulation and detection of quantum bits (qubits) encoded
on single photons is at the heart of quantum communication and optical quantum
information processing. The combination of single-photon sources, passive
optical circuits and single-photon detectors enables quantum repeaters and
qubit amplifiers, and also forms the basis of all-optical quantum gates and of
linear-optics quantum computing. However, the monolithic integration of
sources, waveguides and detectors on the same chip, as needed for scaling to
meaningful number of qubits, is very challenging, and previous work on quantum
photonic circuits has used external sources and detectors. Here we propose an
approach to a fully-integrated quantum photonic circuit on a semiconductor
chip, and demonstrate a key component of such circuit, a waveguide
single-photon detector. Our detectors, based on superconducting nanowires on
GaAs ridge waveguides, provide high efficiency (20%) at telecom wavelengths,
high timing accuracy (60 ps), response time in the ns range, and are fully
compatible with the integration of single-photon sources, passive networks and
modulators.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
The impact of late treatment-toxicity on generic health-related quality of life in head and neck cancer patients after radiotherapy
SummaryTo examine the impact of late treatment-related xerostomia and dysphagia on health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in head and neck cancer (HNC) patients after radiotherapy. A multi-center cross-sectional survey was performed. Patients with a follow-up of at least 6months after curative radiotherapy, without evidence of recurrent disease were eligible for inclusion. The Euroqol-5D questionnaire (EQ-5D) was filled out and toxicity was scored and converted to the RTOG scale. The EQ-5D measures generic HRQOL in terms of utility and visual analogue scale (VAS) scores. Missing data on the EQ-5D were imputed using multiple imputation. HRQOL was compared between subgroups of patients with and without toxicity. Subsequently, the impact of xerostomia and dysphagia on HRQOL was analyzed using multivariate regression analyses. Both analyses were performed separately for utility scores and VAS scores. The study population was composed of 396 HNC patients. The average utility and VAS scores were 0.85 (scale 0–1) and 75 (scale 0–100). Subgroups of patients with xerostomia and/or dysphagia showed statistically significantly lower utility and VAS scores (P=0.000–0.022). The multivariate regression model showed that xerostomia and dysphagia were negative predictors of both utility and VAS scores. Other factors which influenced HRQOL in at least one of the two regression models were: sex, tumor location and the addition of surgery to radiotherapy. Xerostomia and dysphagia diminish generic HRQOL. Moreover dysphagia affects patients’ HRQOL stronger than xerostomia
Widely tunable, efficient on-chip single photon sources at telecommunication wavelengths
We demonstrate tunable on-chip single photon sources using the Stark tuning
of single quantum dot (QD) excitonic transitions in short photonic crystal
waveguides (PhC WGs). The emission of single QDs can be tuned in real-time by 9
nm with an applied bias voltage less than 2V. Due to a reshaped density of
optical modes in the PhC WG, a large coupling efficiency \beta>65% to the
waveguide mode is maintained across a wavelength range of 5 nm. When the QD is
resonant with the Fabry-Perot mode of the PhC WG, a strong enhancement of
spontaneous emission is observed leading to a maximum coupling efficiency
\beta=88%. These results represent an important step towards the scalable
integration of single photon sources in quantum photonic integrated circuits.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figue
The Liver Tumor Segmentation Benchmark (LiTS)
In this work, we report the set-up and results of the Liver Tumor
Segmentation Benchmark (LITS) organized in conjunction with the IEEE
International Symposium on Biomedical Imaging (ISBI) 2016 and International
Conference On Medical Image Computing Computer Assisted Intervention (MICCAI)
2017. Twenty four valid state-of-the-art liver and liver tumor segmentation
algorithms were applied to a set of 131 computed tomography (CT) volumes with
different types of tumor contrast levels (hyper-/hypo-intense), abnormalities
in tissues (metastasectomie) size and varying amount of lesions. The submitted
algorithms have been tested on 70 undisclosed volumes. The dataset is created
in collaboration with seven hospitals and research institutions and manually
reviewed by independent three radiologists. We found that not a single
algorithm performed best for liver and tumors. The best liver segmentation
algorithm achieved a Dice score of 0.96(MICCAI) whereas for tumor segmentation
the best algorithm evaluated at 0.67(ISBI) and 0.70(MICCAI). The LITS image
data and manual annotations continue to be publicly available through an online
evaluation system as an ongoing benchmarking resource.Comment: conferenc
Proceedings of the 29th EG-ICE International Workshop on Intelligent Computing in Engineering
This publication is the Proceedings of the 29th EG-ICE International Workshop on Intelligent Computing in Engineering from July 6-8, 2022. The EG-ICE International Workshop on Intelligent Computing in Engineering brings together international experts working on the interface between advanced computing and modern engineering challenges. Many engineering tasks require open-world resolution of challenges such as supporting multi-actor collaboration, coping with approximate models, providing effective engineer-computer interaction, search in multi-dimensional solution spaces, accommodating uncertainty, including specialist domain knowledge, performing sensor-data interpretation and dealing with incomplete knowledge. While results from computer science provide much initial support for resolution, adaptation is unavoidable and most importantly, feedback from addressing engineering challenges drives fundamental computer-science research. Competence and knowledge transfer goes both ways.
 
Proceedings of the 29th EG-ICE International Workshop on Intelligent Computing in Engineering
This publication is the Proceedings of the 29th EG-ICE International Workshop on Intelligent Computing in Engineering from July 6-8, 2022. The EG-ICE International Workshop on Intelligent Computing in Engineering brings together international experts working on the interface between advanced computing and modern engineering challenges. Many engineering tasks require open-world resolution of challenges such as supporting multi-actor collaboration, coping with approximate models, providing effective engineer-computer interaction, search in multi-dimensional solution spaces, accommodating uncertainty, including specialist domain knowledge, performing sensor-data interpretation and dealing with incomplete knowledge. While results from computer science provide much initial support for resolution, adaptation is unavoidable and most importantly, feedback from addressing engineering challenges drives fundamental computer-science research. Competence and knowledge transfer goes both ways.
 
Bigger cages, longer signifying chains – ideology as structural limitation and discursive practice
The aim of this paper is to present a materialist approach to the concept of ideology which delineates the latter as discursive practice and structural limitation. The discursive practices of ideology are not reducible to sets of immaterial distorted ideas or simply false consciousness. While ideology misrepresents and naturalises the existing social reality, its representations are neither true nor false. As a material phenomenon that exists in semiotic practices, ideology is fundamentally discursive and constitutes subjects by interpellating individuals and providing subject positions from which the imaginary relations to real social relations can be practically and meaningfully represented. Rather than reflecting or expressing their conditions of production, ideological practices actively produce, reproduce, and transform the very material conditions they arise in. In a first step, the article presents and discusses different Marxian notions of ideology, namely ideology as false consciousness, as structural limitation, and as commodity fetishism. In a next step, aspects of a materialist theory of ideology, which describes the latter as a set of material discursive practices will be outlined. The contribution will propose nine fundamental characteristics of ideology developed throughout the paper
Fabrication and characterization of semiconductor devices for integrated quantum photonics
Der Schwerpunkt dieser Arbeit liegt auf der Entwicklung quantenphotonischer Komponenten, welche für eine monolithische Integration auf einem Halbleiter-Chip geeignet sind. Das GaAs-Materialsystem stellt für solch einen optischen Schaltkreis die ideale Plattform dar, weil es flexible Einzelphotonenquellen bereithält und mittels ausgereifter Technologien auf vielfältige Weise prozessiert werden kann.
Als Photonenemitter werden Quantenpunkte genutzt. Man kann sie mit komplexen Bauelementen kombinieren, um ihre optischen Eigenschaften weiter zu verbessern.
Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit konnte eine erhöhte Effizienz der Photonenemission beobachtet werden, wenn Quantenpunkte in Wellenleiter eingebaut werden, die durch photonische Kristalle gebildet werden. Die reduzierte Gruppengeschwindigkeit die diesem Effekt zugrunde liegt konnte anhand des Modenspektrums von kurzen Wellenleitern nachgewiesen werden. Durch zeitaufgelöste Messungen konnte ermittelt werden, dass die Zerfallszeit der spontanen Emission um einen Faktor von 1,7 erhöht wird, wenn die Emitter zur Mode spektrale Resonanz aufweisen. Damit verbunden ist eine sehr hohe Modeneinkopplungseffizienz von 80%.
Das Experiment wurde erweitert, indem die zuvor undotierte Membran des Wellenleiters durch eine Diodenstruktur ersetzt und elektrische Kontakte ergänzt wurden. Durch Anlegen von elektrischen Feldern konnte die Emissionsenergie der Quantenpunkte über einen weiten spektralen Bereich von etwa 7meV abgestimmt werden. Das Verfahren kann genutzt werden, um die exzitonischen Quantenpunktzustände in einen spektralen Bereich der Wellenleitermode mit besonders stark reduzierter Gruppengeschwindigkeit zu verschieben. Hierbei konnten für Purcell-Faktor und Kopplungseffizienz Bestwerte von 2,3 und 90% ermittelt werden. Mithilfe einer Autokorrelationsmessung wurde außerdem nachgewiesen, dass die Bauelemente als Emitter für einzelne Photonen geeignet sind.
Ein weiteres zentrales Thema dieser Arbeit war die Entwicklung spektraler Filterelemente. Aufgrund des selbstorganisierten Wachstums und der großen räumlichen Oberflächendichte von Quantenpunkten werden von typischen Anregungsmechanismen Photonen mit einer Vielzahl unterschiedlicher Energien erzeugt. Um die Emission eines einzelnen Quantenpunktes zu selektieren, muss der Transmissionsbereich des Filters kleiner sein als der Abstand zwischen benachbarten Spektrallinien. Ein Filter konnte durch die Variation des effektiven Brechungsindex entlang von indexgeführten Wellenleitern realisiert werden. Es wurde untersucht wie sich die optischen Eigenschaften durch strukturelle Anpassungen verbessern lassen. Ein weiterer Ansatz wurde mithilfe photonischer Kristalle umgesetzt. Es wurde gezeigt, dass der Filter hierbei eine hohe Güte von 1700 erreicht und gleichzeitig die Emission des Quantenpunkt-Ensembles abgetrennt werden kann. Die Bauelemente wurden so konzipiert, dass die im photonischen Kristall geführten Moden effizient in indexgeführte Stegwellenleiter einkoppeln können.
Ein Teil dieser Arbeit beschäftigte sich zudem mit den Auswirkungen von anisotropen Verspannungen auf die exzitonischen Zustände der Quantenpunkte. Besonders starke Verspannungsfelder konnten induziert werden, wenn der aktive Teil der Bauelemente vom Halbleitersubstrat abgetrennt wurde. Dies wurde durch ein neu entwickeltes Fabrikationsverfahren ermöglicht.
Infolgedessen konnten die Emissionsenergien reversibel um mehr als 5meV abgestimmt werden, ohne dass die optischen Eigenschaften signifikant beeinträchtigt wurden.
Die auf den aktiven Teil der Probe wirkende Verspannung wurde durch die Anwendung verschiedener Modelle abgeschätzt. Darüberhinaus wurde gezeigt, dass durch Verspannungen der spektrale Abstand zwischen den Emissionen von Exziton und Biexziton gezielt beeinflusst werden kann. Die Kontrolle dieser exzitonischen Bindungsenergie kann für die Erzeugung quantenmechanisch verschränkter Photonen genutzt werden. Dieses Ziel kann auch durch die Reduzierung der Feinstrukturaufspaltung des Exzitons erreicht werden. Die experimentell untersuchten Quantenpunkte weisen Feinstrukturaufspaltungen in der Größenordnung von 100meV auf. Durch genau angepasste Verspannungsfelder konnte der Wert erheblich auf 5,1meV verringert werden. Beim Durchfahren des Energieminimums der Feinstrukturaufspaltung wurde eine Drehung der Polarisationsrichtung um nahezu 90° beobachtet. Desweiteren wurde ein Zusammenhang des Polarisationsgrades mit der Feinstrukturaufspaltung nachgewiesen.
Es wurde ein weiterer Prozessablauf entworfen, um komplexe Halbleiterstrukturen auf piezoelektrische Elemente übertragen zu können. Damit war es möglich den Einfluss der Verspannungsfelder auf Systeme aus Quantenpunkten und Mikroresonatoren zu untersuchen. Zunächst wurde demonstriert, dass die Modenaufspaltung von Mikrosäulenresonatoren reversibel angepasst werden kann. Dies ist ebenfalls von Interesse für die Erzeugung polarisationsverschränkter Photonen. An Resonatoren aus photonischen Kristallen konnte schließlich gezeigt werden, dass das Verhältnis der spektralen Abstimmbarkeiten von exzitonischen Emissionslinien und Resonatormode etwa fünf beträgt, sodass beide Linien in Resonanz gebracht werden können. Dieses Verhalten konnte zur Beeinflussung der Licht-Materie-Wechselwirkung genutzt werden.The focus of this work lies on the development of quantum photonic components which are capable to be integrated into a monolithic semiconductor chip. The GaAs material system is an ideal platform for such an optical circuit since it offers flexible emitters for single photons and can be processed in various ways using mature technologies. Quantum dots can serve as photon emitters. They can be readily combined with complex devices in order to enhance their optical properties. In this thesis, an increased efficiency of the photon emission was observed when quantum dots are embedded into photonic crystal waveguides. The reduced group velocity which is responsible for this effect was verified in short waveguides by analyzing spectral features of the mode. Time resolved measurements were used to show a decrease of the decay time of the spontaneous emission time by a factor of 1.7 when the emitter is resonant to the mode. As a consequence, a very high mode coupling efficiency of 80% was found.
In an extended experiment, the previously undoped membrane of the waveguide was replaced by a diode-like layer structure and electrical contacts were added to the device. Using an electrical field, the emission energies of the quantum dots were tuned in a wide spectral range of approximately 7 meV. This technique can be used to shift the excitonic states of the quantum dots towards the spectral part of the waveguide mode where the group velocity is strongly reduced. As a result, the Purcell factor and the coupling efficiency were found to be as high as 2.3 und 90%. Using autorcorrelation measurements single photon emission was demonstrated for the devices.
A futher topic of this work is focused on the development of spectral filters. Due to the self-assembled growth and high spatial surface density of quantum dots, typical excitation schemes generate a great number of photons with different energies. In order to select the emission of a single quantum dot, the transmission range of the filters must be lower than the distance of adjacent spectral lines. A filter device was realized by variations of the effective refractive index alongside of ridge waveguides. The optical properties were improved by structural adjustments. Another approach was implemented by using photonic crystals. This filter yielded a quality factor of 1700 and was able to suppress the emission of the quantum dot ensemble. The devices were designed to efficiently couple the mode from the photonic crystal to a ridge waveguide.
Another part of this work addresses the effect of anistropic strain on the excitonic states of the quantum dots. In order to induce high amounts of strain, the active parts of the devices must be separated from the semiconductor substrate. For this reason a new fabrication process was developed. Consequently, reversible tuning ranges of more than 5 meV could be achieved for the emission energies while largely maintaining the optical properties. Strain applied at the active parts of the sample was estimated using various models. Furthermore, it was demonstrated that the spectral distance between exciton and biexziton is influenced by strain. The manipulation of the excitonic binding energy is useful for the generation of quantum-mechanically entangled photons. Another way to accomplish this goal is the reduction of the fine structure splitting of the exciton. The fine structur splitting of quantum dots used in the experiments is in the order of magnitude of 100 µeV. This value was decreased to 5.1 µeV by precise adjustments of the induced strain. A rotation of the emission polarization by almost 90◦ was observed when crossing the energetic minimum of the fine structure splitting. Furthermore, a change of the degree of polarization associated with the fine structure splitting was demontrated.
A further process flow was developed in order to transfer complex device structures onto piezoelectric substrates. This allows for the investigation of strain induced to systems composed of quantum dots and microresonators. It was demonstrated that the spectral splitting of the mode of micropillar resonators can be tuned in a reversible manner. This finding is again interesting for the generation of polarization-entangled photons. When strain is applied to photonic crystal resonators a ratio of 5 is observed for the tuning ranges of excitonic emission lines and resonator mode with the result that resonance can accomplished between both lines. Since the tuning sensitivities are different the interaction of light and matter can be adjusted by strain