7 research outputs found
Resonance fluorescence from waveguide-coupled strain-localized two-dimensional quantum emitters
Efficient on-chip integration of single-photon emitters imposes a major
bottleneck for applications of photonic integrated circuits in quantum
technologies. Resonantly excited solid-state emitters are emerging as
near-optimal quantum light sources, if not for the lack of scalability of
current devices. Current integration approaches rely on cost-inefficient
individual emitter placement in photonic integrated circuits, rendering
applications impossible. A promising scalable platform is based on
two-dimensional (2D) semiconductors. However, resonant excitation and
single-photon emission of waveguide-coupled 2D emitters have proven to be
elusive. Here, we show a scalable approach using a silicon nitride photonic
waveguide to simultaneously strain-localize single-photon emitters from a
tungsten diselenide (WSe2) monolayer and to couple them into a waveguide mode.
We demonstrate the guiding of single photons in the photonic circuit by
measuring second-order autocorrelation of g and
perform on-chip resonant excitation yielding a g. Our
results are an important step to enable coherent control of quantum states and
multiplexing of high-quality single photons in a scalable photonic quantum
circuit
Resonance fluorescence from waveguide-coupled strain-localized two-dimensional quantum emitters
Efficient on-chip integration of single-photon emitters imposes a major
bottleneck for applications of photonic integrated circuits in quantum
technologies. Resonantly excited solid-state emitters are emerging as
near-optimal quantum light sources, if not for the lack of scalability of
current devices. Current integration approaches rely on cost-inefficient
individual emitter placement in photonic integrated circuits, rendering
applications impossible. A promising scalable platform is based on
two-dimensional (2D) semiconductors. However, resonant excitation and
single-photon emission of waveguide-coupled 2D emitters have proven to be
elusive. Here, we show a scalable approach using a silicon nitride photonic
waveguide to simultaneously strain-localize single-photon emitters from a
tungsten diselenide (WSe2) monolayer and to couple them into a waveguide mode.
We demonstrate the guiding of single photons in the photonic circuit by
measuring second-order autocorrelation of g and
perform on-chip resonant excitation yielding a g. Our
results are an important step to enable coherent control of quantum states and
multiplexing of high-quality single photons in a scalable photonic quantum
circuit
A multipair-free source of entangled photons in the solid state
Unwanted multiphoton emission commonly reduces the degree of entanglement of
photons generated by non-classical light sources and, in turn, hampers their
exploitation in quantum information science and technology. Quantum emitters
have the potential to overcome this hurdle but, so far, the effect of
multiphoton emission on the quality of entanglement has never been addressed in
detail. Here, we tackle this challenge using photon pairs from a
resonantly-driven quantum dot and comparing quantum state tomography and
second-order coherence measurements as a function of the excitation power. We
observe that the relative (absolute) multiphoton emission probability is as low
as () at the maximum
source brightness, values that lead to a negligible effect on the degree of
entanglement. In stark contrast with probabilistic sources of entangled
photons, we also demonstrate that the multiphoton emission probability and the
degree of entanglement remain practically unchanged against the excitation
power for multiple Rabi cycles, despite we clearly observe oscillations in the
second-order coherence measurements. Our results, explained by a theoretical
model that we develop to estimate the actual multiphoton contribution in the
two-photon density matrix, highlight that quantum dots can be regarded as a
multipair-free source of entangled photons in the solid state
Quantum dot single-photon emission coupled into single-mode fibers with 3D printed micro-objectives
User-friendly single-photon sources with high photon-extraction efficiency are crucial building blocks for photonic quantum applications. For many of these applications, such as long-distance quantum key distribution, the use of single-mode optical fibers is mandatory, which leads to stringent requirements regarding the device design and fabrication. We report on the on-chip integration of a quantum dot (QD) microlens with a 3D-printed micro-objective in combination with a single-mode on-chip fiber coupler. The practical quantum device is realized by the deterministic fabrication of the QD-microlens via in situ electron-beam lithography and the 3D two-photon laser writing of the on-chip micro-objective and fiber chuck. A QD with a microlens is an efficient single-photon source, whose emission is collimated by the on-chip micro-objective. A second polymer microlens is located at the end facet of the single-mode fiber and ensures that the collimated light is efficiently coupled into the fiber core. For this purpose, the fiber is placed in an on-chip fiber chuck, which is precisely aligned to the QD-microlens thanks to the sub-micrometer processing accuracy of high-resolution two-photon direct laser writing. The resulting quantum device has a broadband photon extraction efficiency, a single-mode fiber-coupling efficiency of 22%, a measured single-photon flux of 42 kHz (8.9 kHz) under cw (pulsed) optical excitation, which corresponds to 1.5 MHz (0.3 MHz) at the single-mode fiber output, and a multi-photon probability in terms of g(2)(0) = 0.00±0.04/0.00 (0.13 ± 0.05) under cw (pulsed) optical excitation. The stable design of the developed fiber-coupled quantum device makes it highly attractive for integration into user-friendly plug-and-play quantum applications.BMBF, 16KIS0862, Verbundprojekt: Q.Link.Extension - Q.Link.X -; Teilvorhaben: Komponenten und Aufbau einer Demonstratorstrecke zur speicher-assistierten QuantenschlüsselübertragungDFG, 255652081, SPP 1839: Tailored Disorder - A science- and engineering-based approach to materials design for advanced photonic applicationsDFG, 273920612, SPP 1929: Giant Interactions in Rydberg Systems (GiRyd