138 research outputs found
Observation of strongly entangled photon pairs from a nanowire quantum dot
A bright photon source that combines high-fidelity entanglement, on-demand
generation, high extraction efficiency, directional and coherent emission, as
well as position control at the nanoscale is required for implementing
ambitious schemes in quantum information processing, such as that of a quantum
repeater. Still, all of these properties have not yet been achieved in a single
device. Semiconductor quantum dots embedded in nanowire waveguides potentially
satisfy all of these requirements; however, although theoretically predicted,
entanglement has not yet been demonstrated for a nanowire quantum dot. Here, we
demonstrate a bright and coherent source of strongly entangled photon pairs
from a position controlled nanowire quantum dot with a fidelity as high as
0.859 +/- 0.006 and concurrence of 0.80 +/- 0.02. The two-photon quantum state
is modified via the nanowire shape. Our new nanoscale entangled photon source
can be integrated at desired positions in a quantum photonic circuit, single
electron devices and light emitting diodes.Comment: Article and Supplementary Information with open access published at:
http://www.nature.com/ncomms/2014/141031/ncomms6298/full/ncomms6298.htm
Tuning the exciton g-factor in single InAs/InP quantum dots
Photoluminescence data from single, self-assembled InAs/InP quantum dots in
magnetic fields up to 7 T are presented. Exciton g-factors are obtained for
dots of varying height, corresponding to ground state emission energies ranging
from 780 meV to 1100 meV. A monotonic increase of the g-factor from -2 to +1.2
is observed as the dot height decreases. The trend is well reproduced by sp3
tight binding calculations, which show that the hole g-factor is sensitive to
confinement effects through orbital angular momentum mixing between the
light-hole and heavy-hole valence bands. We demonstrate tunability of the
exciton g-factor by manipulating the quantum dot dimensions using pyramidal InP
nanotemplates
Bright single-photon sources in bottom-up tailored nanowires
The ability to achieve near-unity light extraction efficiency is necessary
for a truly deterministic single photon source. The most promising method to
reach such high efficiencies is based on embedding single photon emitters in
tapered photonic waveguides defined by top-down etching techniques. However,
light extraction efficiencies in current top-down approaches are limited by
fabrication imperfections and etching induced defects. The efficiency is
further tempered by randomly positioned off-axis quantum emitters. Here, we
present perfectly positioned single quantum dots on the axis of a tailored
nanowire waveguide using bottom-up growth. In comparison to quantum dots in
nanowires without waveguide, we demonstrate a 24-fold enhancement in the single
photon flux, corresponding to a light extraction efficiency of 42 %. Such high
efficiencies in one-dimensional nanowires are promising to transfer quantum
information over large distances between remote stationary qubits using flying
qubits within the same nanowire p-n junction.Comment: 19 pages, 6 figure
Fast Purcell-enhanced single photon source in 1,550-nm telecom band from a resonant quantum dot-cavity coupling
High-bit-rate nanocavity-based single photon sources in the 1,550-nm telecom
band are challenges facing the development of fibre-based long-haul quantum
communication networks. Here we report a very fast single photon source in the
1,550-nm telecom band, which is achieved by a large Purcell enhancement that
results from the coupling of a single InAs quantum dot and an InP photonic
crystal nanocavity. At a resonance, the spontaneous emission rate was enhanced
by a factor of 5 resulting a record fast emission lifetime of 0.2 ns at 1,550
nm. We also demonstrate that this emission exhibits an enhanced anti-bunching
dip. This is the first realization of nanocavity-enhanced single photon
emitters in the 1,550-nm telecom band. This coupled quantum dot cavity system
in the telecom band thus provides a bright high-bit-rate non-classical single
photon source that offers appealing novel opportunities for the development of
a long-haul quantum telecommunication system via optical fibres.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figure
Ultrafast coherent manipulation of trions in site-controlled nanowire quantum dots
Physical implementations of large-scale quantum processors based on solid-state platforms benefit from realizations of quantum bits positioned in regular arrays. Self-assembled quantum dots are well established as promising candidates for quantum optics and quantum information processing, but they are randomly positioned. Site-controlled quantum dots, on the other hand, are grown in pre-defined locations but have not yet been sufficiently developed to be used as a platform for quantum information processing. In this paper, we demonstrate all-optical ultrafast complete coherent control of a qubit formed by the single-spin/trion states of a charged site-controlled nanowire quantum dot. Our results show that site-controlled quantum dots in nanowires are promising hosts of charged-exciton qubits and that these qubits can be cleanly manipulated in the same fashion as has been demonstrated in randomly positioned quantum dot samples. Our findings suggest that many of the related excitonic qubit experiments that have been performed over the past 15 years may work well in the more scalable, site-controlled systems, making them very promising for the realization of quantum hardware
Tunable variation of optical properties of polymer capped gold nanoparticles
Optical properties of polymer capped gold nanoparticles of various sizes
(diameter 3-6 nm) have been studied. We present a new scheme to extract size
dependent variation of total dielectric function of gold nanoparticles from
measured UV-Vis absorption data. The new scheme can also be used, in principle,
for other related systems as well. We show how quantum effect, surface atomic
co - ordination and polymer - nanoparticle interface morphology leads to a
systematic variation in inter band part of the dielectric function of gold
nanoparticles, obtained from the analysis using our new scheme. Careful
analysis enables identification of the possible changes to the electronic band
structure in such nanoparticles.Comment: 13 pages,7 figures, 1 tabl
Multiplexed Single Photons from Deterministically Positioned Nanowire Quantum Dots
Solid-state quantum emitters are excellent sources of on-demand
indistinguishable or entangled photons and can host long-lived spin memories,
crucial resources for photonic quantum information applications. However, their
scalability remains an outstanding challenge. Here we present a scalable
technique to multiplex streams of photons from multiple independent quantum
dots, on-chip, into a fiber network for use off-chip. Multiplexing is achieved
by incorporating a multi-core fiber into a confocal microscope and spatially
matching the multiple foci, seven in this case, to quantum dots in an array of
deterministically positioned nanowires. First, we report the coherent control
of the emission of biexciton-exciton cascade from a single nanowire quantum dot
under resonant two-photon excitation. Then, as a proof-of-principle
demonstration, we perform parallel spectroscopy on the nanowire array to
identify two nearly identical quantum dots at different positions which are
subsequently tuned into resonance with an external magnetic field. Multiplexing
of background-free single photons from these two quantum dots is then achieved.
Our approach, applicable to all types of quantum emitters, can readily be
scaled up to multiplex quantum light sources, providing a breakthrough
in hardware for photonic based quantum technologies. Immediate applications
include quantum communication, quantum simulation, and quantum computation.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Oscillating photonic Bell state from a semiconductor quantum dot for quantum key distribution
An on-demand source of bright entangled photon pairs is desirable for quantum
key distribution (QKD) and quantum repeaters. The leading candidate to generate
entangled photon pairs is based on spontaneous parametric down-conversion
(SPDC) in a non-linear crystal. However, there exists a fundamental trade-off
between entanglement fidelity and efficiency in SPDC sources due to multiphoton
emission at high brightness, which limits the pair extraction efficiency to
0.1% when operating at near-unity fidelity. Quantum dots in photonic
nanostructures can in principle overcome this trade-off; however, the quantum
dots that have achieved entanglement fidelities on par with SPDC sources (99%)
have poor pair extraction efficiencies of 0.01%. Here, we demonstrate a 65-fold
increase in the pair extraction efficiency compared to quantum dots with
equivalent peak fidelity from an InAsP quantum dot in a photonic nanowire
waveguide. We measure a raw peak concurrence and fidelity of 95.3% 0.5%
and 97.5% 0.8%, respectively. Finally, we show that an oscillating
two-photon Bell state generated by a semiconductor quantum dot can be utilized
to establish a secure key for QKD, alleviating the need to remove the quantum
dot energy splitting of the intermediate exciton states in the
biexciton-exciton cascade.Comment: 24 pages (7 main body, excluding references plus 14 supplemental
information) and 4 main body figure
Dynamic Acoustic Control of Individual Optically Active Quantum Dot-like Emission Centers in Heterostructure Nanowires
We probe and control the optical properties of emission centers forming in
radial het- erostructure GaAs-Al0.3Ga0.7As nanowires and show that these
emitters, located in Al0.3Ga0.7As layers, can exhibit quantum-dot like
characteristics. We employ a radio frequency surface acoustic wave to
dynamically control their emission energy and occupancy state on a nanosec- ond
timescale. In the spectral oscillations we identify unambiguous signatures
arising from both the mechanical and electrical component of the surface
acoustic wave. In addition, differ- ent emission lines of a single quantum dot
exhibit pronounced anti-correlated intensity oscilla- tions during the acoustic
cycle. These arise from a dynamically triggered carrier extraction out of the
quantum dot to a continuum in the radial heterostructure. Using finite element
modeling and Wentzel-Kramers-Brillouin theory we identify quantum tunneling as
the underlying mech- anism. These simulation results quantitatively reproduce
the observed switching and show that in our systems these quantum dots are
spatially separated from the continuum by > 10.5 nm.Comment: This document is the unedited Author's version of a Submitted Work
that was subsequently accepted for publication in Nano Letters, copyright
\c{copyright} American Chemical Society after peer review. To access the
final edited and published work see
http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/nl404043
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