Individually addressable and spectrally programmable artificial atoms in silicon photonics

Journal Article (2023)
Author(s)

Mihika Prabhu (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)

Carlos Errando-Herranz (Universität Münster, Massachusetts Institute of Technology)

Lorenzo De Santis (TU Delft - QID/Hanson Lab, TU Delft - Communication QuTech, Massachusetts Institute of Technology)

Ian Christen (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)

Changchen Chen (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)

Connor Gerlach (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)

Dirk Englund (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)

Research Group
Quantum Circuit Architectures and Technology
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-37655-x Final published version
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Publication Year
2023
Language
English
Research Group
Quantum Circuit Architectures and Technology
Journal title
Nature Communications
Issue number
1
Volume number
14
Article number
2380
Downloads counter
349
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Abstract

A central goal for quantum technologies is to develop platforms for precise and scalable control of individually addressable artificial atoms with efficient optical interfaces. Color centers in silicon, such as the recently-isolated carbon-related G-center, exhibit emission directly into the telecommunications O-band and can leverage the maturity of silicon-on-insulator photonics. We demonstrate the generation, individual addressing, and spectral trimming of G-center artificial atoms in a silicon-on-insulator photonic integrated circuit platform. Focusing on the neutral charge state emission at 1278 nm, we observe waveguide-coupled single photon emission with narrow inhomogeneous distribution with standard deviation of 1.1 nm, excited state lifetime of 8.3 ± 0.7 ns, and no degradation after over a month of operation. In addition, we introduce a technique for optical trimming of spectral transitions up to 300 pm (55 GHz) and local deactivation of single artificial atoms. This non-volatile spectral programming enables alignment of quantum emitters into 25 GHz telecommunication grid channels. Our demonstration opens the path to quantum information processing based on implantable artificial atoms in very large scale integrated photonics.