8 research outputs found
Dual-Wavelength Lasing in Quantum-Dot Plasmonic Lattice Lasers
Arrays of metallic particles patterned on a substrate have emerged as a
promising design for on-chip plasmonic lasers. In past examples of such
devices, the periodic particles provided feedback at a single resonance
wavelength, and organic dye molecules were used as the gain material. Here, we
introduce a flexible template-based fabrication method that allows a broader
design space for Ag particle-array lasers. Instead of dye molecules, we
integrate colloidal quantum dots (QDs), which offer better photostability and
wavelength tunability. Our fabrication approach also allows us to easily adjust
the refractive index of the substrate and the QD-film thickness. Exploiting
these capabilities, we demonstrate not only single-wavelength lasing but
dual-wavelength lasing via two distinct strategies. First, by using particle
arrays with rectangular lattice symmetries, we obtain feedback from two
orthogonal directions. The two output wavelengths from this laser can be
selected individually using a linear polarizer. Second, by adjusting the
QD-film thickness, we use higher-order transverse waveguide modes in the QD
film to obtain dual-wavelength lasing at normal and off-normal angles from a
symmetric square array. We thus show that our approach offers various design
possibilities to tune the laser output
Ultra-long relaxation of a Kramers qubit formed in a bilayer graphene quantum dot
The intrinsic valley degree of freedom makes bilayer graphene a unique
platform for emerging types of semiconducting qubits. The single-carrier
quantum dot ground state exhibits a two-fold degeneracy where the two states
have opposite spin and valley quantum numbers. By breaking the time-reversal
symmetry of this ground state with an out-of-plane magnetic field, a novel type
of qubit (Kramers qubit), encoded in the two-dimensional spin-valley subspace,
becomes accessible. The Kramers qubit is robust against known spin- and
valley-mixing mechanisms, as it requires a simultaneous change of both quantum
numbers, potentially resulting in long relaxation and coherence times. We
measure the relaxation time of a single carrier in the excited states of a
bilayer graphene quantum dot at small () and zero magnetic
fields. We demonstrate ultra-long spin-valley relaxation times of the Kramers
qubit exceeding , which is about two orders of magnitude longer
than the spin relaxation time of . The demonstrated
high-fidelity single-shot readout and long relaxation times are the foundation
for novel, long-lived semiconductor qubits
Spectroscopy of a single-carrier bilayer graphene quantum dot from time-resolved charge detection
We measured the spectrum of a single-carrier bilayer graphene quantum dot as
a function of both parallel and perpendicular magnetic fields, using a
time-resolved charge detection technique that gives access to individual tunnel
events. Thanks to our unprecedented energy resolution of 4eV, we could
distinguish all four levels of the dot's first orbital, in particular in the
range of magnetic fields where the first and second excited states cross
(mT). We thereby experimentally establish, the hitherto
extrapolated, single-charge carrier spectrum picture and provide a new upper
bound for the inter-valley mixing, equal to our energy resolution
Dipole coupling of a bilayer graphene quantum dot to a high-impedance microwave resonator
We implement circuit quantum electrodynamics (cQED) with quantum dots in
bilayer graphene, a maturing material platform for semiconductor qubits that
can host long-lived spin and valley states. The presented device combines a
high-impedance () superconducting
microwave resonator with a double quantum dot electrostatically defined in a
graphene-based van der Waals heterostructure. Electric dipole coupling between
the subsystems allows the resonator to sense the electric susceptibility of the
double quantum dot from which we reconstruct its charge stability diagram. We
achieve sensitive and fast detection with a signal-to-noise ratio of 3.5 within
1 integration time. The charge-photon interaction is
quantified in the dispersive and resonant regimes by comparing the
coupling-induced change in the resonator response to input-output theory,
yielding a maximal coupling strength of . Our
results introduce cQED as a probe for quantum dots in van der Waals materials
and indicate a path toward coherent charge-photon coupling with bilayer
graphene quantum dots.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Dual-Wavelength Lasing in Quantum-Dot Plasmonic Lattice Lasers
Arrays of metallic particles patterned on a substrate have emerged as a promising design for on-chip plasmonic lasers. In past examples of such devices, the periodic particles provided feedback at a single resonance wavelength, and organic dye molecules were used as the gain material. Here, we introduce a flexible template-based fabrication method that allows a broader design space for Ag particle-array lasers. Instead of dye molecules, we integrate colloidal quantum dots (QDs), which offer better photostability and wavelength tunability. Our fabrication approach also allows us to easily adjust the refractive index of the substrate and the QD-film thickness. Exploiting these capabilities, we demonstrate not only single-wavelength lasing but dual-wavelength lasing via two distinct strategies. First, by using particle arrays with rectangular lattice symmetries, we obtain feedback from two orthogonal directions. The two output wavelengths from this laser can be selected individually using a linear polarizer. Second, by adjusting the QD-film thickness, we use higher-order transverse waveguide modes in the QD film to obtain dual-wavelength lasing at normal and off-normal angles from a symmetric square array. We thus show that our approach offers various design possibilities to tune the laser output.ISSN:1936-0851ISSN:1936-086
Dual-Wavelength Lasing in Quantum-Dot Plasmonic Lattice Lasers
Arrays of metallic particles patterned on a substrate have emerged as a promising design for on-chip plasmonic lasers. In past examples of such devices, the periodic particles provided feedback at a single resonance wavelength, and organic dye molecules were used as the gain material. Here, we introduce a flexible template-based fabrication method that allows a broader design space for Ag particle-array lasers. Instead of dye molecules, we integrate colloidal quantum dots (QDs), which offer better photostability and wavelength tunability. Our fabrication approach also allows us to easily adjust the refractive index of the substrate and the QD-film thickness. Exploiting these capabilities, we demonstrate not only single-wavelength lasing but dual-wavelength lasing via two distinct strategies. First, by using particle arrays with rectangular lattice symmetries, we obtain feedback from two orthogonal directions. The two output wavelengths from this laser can be selected individually using a linear polarizer. Second, by adjusting the QD-film thickness, we use higher-order transverse waveguide modes in the QD film to obtain dual-wavelength lasing at normal and off-normal angles from a symmetric square array. We thus show that our approach offers various design possibilities to tune the laser output
Dual-Wavelength Lasing in Quantum-Dot Plasmonic Lattice Lasers
Arrays of metallic particles patterned on a substrate have emerged as a promising design for on-chip plasmonic lasers. In past examples of such devices, the periodic particles provided feedback at a single resonance wavelength, and organic dye molecules were used as the gain material. Here, we introduce a flexible template-based fabrication method that allows a broader design space for Ag particle-array lasers. Instead of dye molecules, we integrate colloidal quantum dots (QDs), which offer better photostability and wavelength tunability. Our fabrication approach also allows us to easily adjust the refractive index of the substrate and the QD-film thickness. Exploiting these capabilities, we demonstrate not only single-wavelength lasing but dual-wavelength lasing via two distinct strategies. First, by using particle arrays with rectangular lattice symmetries, we obtain feedback from two orthogonal directions. The two output wavelengths from this laser can be selected individually using a linear polarizer. Second, by adjusting the QD-film thickness, we use higher-order transverse waveguide modes in the QD film to obtain dual-wavelength lasing at normal and off-normal angles from a symmetric square array. We thus show that our approach offers various design possibilities to tune the laser output
Waveguide quantum electrodynamics with superconducting artificial giant atoms
Models of light–matter interactions in quantum electrodynamics typically invoke the dipole approximation1,2, in which atoms are treated as point-like objects when compared to the wavelength of the electromagnetic modes with which they interact. However, when the ratio between the size of the atom and the mode wavelength is increased, the dipole approximation no longer holds and the atom is referred to as a ‘giant atom’2,3. So far, experimental studies with solid-state devices in the giant-atom regime have been limited to superconducting qubits that couple to short-wavelength surface acoustic waves4–10, probing the properties of the atom at only a single frequency. Here we use an alternative architecture that realizes a giant atom by coupling small atoms to a waveguide at multiple, but well separated, discrete locations. This system enables tunable atom–waveguide couplings with large on–off ratios3 and a coupling spectrum that can be engineered by the design of the device. We also demonstrate decoherence-free interactions between multiple giant atoms that are mediated by the quasi-continuous spectrum of modes in the waveguide—an effect that is not achievable using small atoms11. These features allow qubits in this architecture to switch between protected and emissive configurations in situ while retaining qubit–qubit interactions, opening up possibilities for high-fidelity quantum simulations and non-classical itinerant photon generation12,13