Affiliation:
1. Photonic Inc.
2. Université de Montréal
3. Leibniz-Institut für Kristallzüchtung
4. VITCON Projectconsult GmbH
Abstract
The performance of modular, networked quantum technologies will be strongly dependent upon the quality of their quantum light-matter interconnects. Solid-state colour centres, and in particular T centres in silicon, offer competitive technological and commercial advantages as the basis for quantum networking technologies and distributed quantum computing. These newly rediscovered silicon defects offer direct telecommunications-band photonic emission, long-lived electron and nuclear spin qubits, and proven native integration into industry-standard, CMOS-compatible, silicon-on-insulator (SOI) photonic chips at scale. Here we demonstrate further levels of integration by characterizing T centre spin ensembles in single-mode waveguides in SOI. In addition to measuring long spin T1 times, we report on the integrated centres’ optical properties. We find that the narrow homogeneous linewidth of these waveguide-integrated emitters is already sufficiently low to predict the future success of remote spin-entangling protocols with only modest cavity Purcell enhancements. We show that further improvements may still be possible by measuring nearly lifetime-limited homogeneous linewidths in isotopically pure bulk crystals. In each case the measured linewidths are more than an order of magnitude lower than previously reported and further support the view that high-performance, large-scale distributed quantum technologies based upon T centres in silicon may be attainable in the near term.
Funder
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
Fonds de recherche du Québec – Nature et technologies
Canadian Institute for Advanced Research
Canada Research Chairs
Simon Fraser University
Western Economic Diversification Canada
British Columbia Knowledge Development Fund
Canada Foundation for Innovation
Subject
Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
Cited by
12 articles.
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