Heterogenous III-V diamond photonic platform for quantum network nodes based on neutral silicon vacancy centers in diamond

POSTER

Abstract

Photonic integration with diamond-based color centers is a promising avenue toward enabling long-haul entanglement distribution, but previously studied color centers lacked the requisite environmental insensitivity for integration in nanofabricated structures [1]. We present a heterogeneously integrated III-V diamond photonic platform specifically designed for neutral silicon vacancy (SiV0) color centers. The SiV0 center has an array of highly desirable properties, such as long spin coherence and low spectral diffusion, that make it a highly suitable candidate for nodes in quantum networks [2,3]. We utilize a highly selective III-V dry etch and stamp transfer method and entirely avoid etching the diamond substrate, preventing material damage and spectral diffusion associated with diamond nanofabrication. Using 1D photonic crystal cavities and nonlinear frequency conversion in ring resonators, SiV0 emission can be Purcell enhanced and efficiently collected, while providing a source of telecommunication photons for long-haul fiber optic transmission.

*This work was primarily supported by DARPA under Young Faculty Award(award number D18AP00047) and the Co-design Center for Quantum Advantage (C2QA), and work on the neutral silicon vacancy center was supported by the NSF under the EFRI ACQUIRE program(grant 1640959).

Publication: [1]Ruf, M., et al. Nano lett. 19.6 (2019):3987-3992
[2]Rose, B. C., et al. Science 361.6397 (2018):60-63
[3]Zhang, Z., et al. arXiv:2004.12544 (2020)

Presenters

  • Sean Karg

    • Princeton University

Authors

  • Sean Karg

    • Princeton University
  • Alexander Abulnaga

    • Princeton University
  • Ding Huang

    • Princeton University
    • Institute of Materials Research and Engineering
  • Sacha Welinski

    • Thales Group
  • Mouktik Raha

    • University of Chicago
  • Zihuai Zhang

    • Princeton University
  • Paul Stevenson

    • Northeastern University
  • Jeff D Thompson

    • Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Princeton University, NJ 08544, USA
    • Princeton University
  • Nathalie P de Leon

    • Princeton University