SINGLE PHOTON SOURCES
20220381979 · 2022-12-01
Inventors
Cpc classification
G02B6/1225
PHYSICS
B82Y20/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A single photon source comprises a photon emitter (10), an excitation waveguide (30) arranged to direct excitation photons having a first polarisation direction into the photon emitter, and a collection waveguide (42) arranged to collect photons having a second polarisation direction from the photon emitter. The first polarisation direction is coupled to a first exciton state of the photon emitter and the second polarisation direction is non-parallel to the first polarisation direction and is coupled to a second exciton state of the photon emitter, and the first and second exciton states have substantially equal energies.
Claims
1-17. (canceled)
18. A photon source comprising: a photon emitter; an excitation waveguide arranged to direct excitation photons having a first polarization direction into the photon emitter; and a collection waveguide arranged to collect photons having a second polarization direction from the photon emitter, wherein the first polarization direction is coupled to a first exciton state of the photon emitter and the second polarization direction is non-parallel to the first polarization direction and is coupled to a second exciton state of the photon emitter, and the first and second exciton states have substantially equal energies.
19. The photon source according to claim 18 wherein the first polarization direction and the second polarization direction are substantially mutually perpendicular.
20. The photon source according to claim 18 wherein the photon emitter comprises a quantum dot.
21. The photon source according to claim 20 wherein the quantum dot has a short axis and a long axis that is perpendicular to the short axis.
22. The photon source according to claim 18 wherein the excitation waveguide is arranged to direct the excitation photons into the photon emitter in an excitation direction and the collection waveguide is arranged to collect the photons emitted from the photon source in a collection direction.
23. The photon source according to claim 22 wherein the photon emitter comprises a quantum dot having a short axis and a long axis that is perpendicular to the short axis, wherein the excitation direction is offset from the long axis by an excitation direction offset angle and the collection direction is offset from the long axis by a collection direction offset angle, and wherein the excitation direction offset angle is equal to the collection direction offset angle.
24. The photon source according to claim 18 wherein the photon emitter is a color center in a diamond.
25. The photon source according to claim 18 wherein the photon emitter is a defect in a crystal structure.
26. The photon source according to claim 18 further comprising a source of magnetic field arranged to apply a magnetic field to the photon emitter, the magnetic field being perpendicular to both of the first and second polarization directions.
27. A photon source comprising: a quantum dot having a long axis and a short axis perpendicular to the long axis; an excitation waveguide arranged to direct photons into the quantum dot in an excitation direction; and a collection waveguide arranged to collect photons emitted from the quantum dot in a collection direction, wherein the excitation direction and the collection direction are non-parallel to each other and a diameter of the quantum dot in the collection direction is substantially equal to a diameter of the quantum dot in the excitation direction.
28. The photon source according to claim 27 wherein the excitation direction and the collection direction are substantially mutually perpendicular.
29. The photon source according to claim 27 wherein the excitation direction is offset from the long axis by an excitation direction offset angle and the collection direction is offset from the long axis by a collection direction offset angle, and wherein the excitation direction offset angle is equal to the collection direction offset angle.
30. The photon source according to claim 29 wherein the excitation direction offset angle and the collection direction offset angle are each about 45°.
31. The photon source according to claim 27 further comprising a source of magnetic field arranged to apply a magnetic field to the photon emitter, the magnetic field being perpendicular to both the excitation direction and the collection direction.
32. The photon source according to claim 27 wherein the waveguides at least partly form at least one reflector thereby forming a photonic crystal cavity.
33. The photon source according to claim 32 wherein the photonic crystal cavity is asymmetric so as to induce Purcell enhancement of the emission of the photons into the collection waveguide.
34. The photon source according to claim 32 wherein the at least one reflector is a Bragg reflector.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0027] Referring to
[0028] In such a dot there are various electron energy bands, and an electron can be excited from one band up to a higher energy band, leaving a hole in the lower band. The combination of the electron and the hole is referred to as an exciton and the exciton has an energy associated with it, which is the transition energy of the electron between the bands. Different spin states of the electron and hole correspond to different orientations within the QD. The direction of spin of the electron is represented by the simple arrow T and the direction of spin of the hole is represented by the open arrow . Orientations that lie along the long and short axes are termed X.sub.y and X.sub.x respectively. In this case, the differing size of the electron confinement potentials gives rise to a fine structure splitting (FSS) between the energies of the two exciton states Xx and Xy. This FSS is shown in
[0029] Referring to and |X.sub.A
with corresponding decay rates γ.sub.D and γ.sub.A, which will be equal in absence of any other external constrains.
[0030] Using the D and A directions to excite and collect means that the excitation direction and the collection direction are offset from the long axis of the QD by the same angle, in this case 45°. It will be appreciated that, provided the excitation and collection directions are offset from the long axis by equal angles, the excitation and collection exciton energies would potentially be equal. However if the excitation and collection directions are both offset from the long axis of the QD by an angle less than 45° or more than 45°, then the polarizations of the excitation and collection photons are no longer perpendicular and some cross-talk between the excitation and collection photons (i.e. between the waveguides in which those photons are transmitted as will be described below) occurs.
[0031] A D-polarised short resonant laser pulse (with Rabi frequency Ω(t) and pulse-area of π) creates a population of 1 in the IX.sub.D state. The system will then oscillate with frequency δ (defined by the FSS−ℏδ) between |X.sub.D
and |X.sub.A
states with a decay rate from each one to the ground state, of γ=γ.sub.D=γ.sub.A as shown in
effectively means the cumulative probability of the single-photon emission in time, which in the absence of Purcell enhancement occurs on a timescale of approximately 1 nanosecond. Since the FSS oscillation is much faster than this, half of the single photons are emitted from each of the |X.sub.D
and |X.sub.A
states, and hence half of the emitted photons have D polarization and half have A polarization. After including out-of-plane losses (≈30%) and non-directional emission, the collection efficiency (q) from the end of a waveguide coupled to the |X.sub.A
state is 0.187 for realistic parameters.
[0032] The QD may be placed in a photonic structure arranged to transmit exciting photons into the QD and to collect emitted photons from the QD, with the photonic structure arranged to form waveguides such that A and D exciton states of the QD couple to the polarizations of the different waveguides. In this case, the first, D-polarised, waveguide delivers laser excitation pulses, and the second, A-polarised, waveguide is used to extract the emission. The second waveguide can also have an embedded resonator, Purcell enhancing only the |X.sub.A transition, as shown schematically in
state it all (98-99% in the case of realistic parameters) decays producing an A-polarised photon emission as shown in
[0033] Referring to
[0034] In operation, stimulation laser pulses are transmitted along the stimulation waveguide 20 having polarisation in the D direction, and photons are collected on the collection waveguide 22 having polarisation in the A direction.
[0035] Referring to
[0036] In order to provide Purcell enhancement of the emission of photons into the collection waveguide 32, a resonator may be provided in at least one of the waveguides 30, 32. For example the excitation waveguide 30, which couples only to the |X.sub.D transition, may not be provided with a resonator and. The orthogonal, A-aligned collection waveguide 32, which couples to the |X.sub.A
transition may have an asymmetric photonic crystal cavity which induces Purcell enhancement. This cavity may be formed by forming a Bragg reflector 40 on one side of the QD 10, and a weaker Bragg reflector 42 on the opposite side of the QD 10, with the two reflectors facing each other. The Bragg reflector 40 may be formed as a plurality of holes 44 formed in the waveguide with a regular spacing and aligned along the centre of the waveguide. This effectively prevents any emission of photons along the collection waveguide 32 in one direction which is opposite to the collection direction. The weaker Bragg reflector 42 comprises a similar array of holes, but fewer in number. This allows photons to be emitted along the collection waveguide in one direction, which is the collection direction. The asymmetry of the cavity leads to nearly 100% directional emission of the single photons in the collection direction. The excitation waveguide 30 may have no resonator formed in it at all, as shown in
[0037] In addition to the reflector(s) formed in the collection waveguide 32, a pair of reflectors may be formed in the excitation waveguide, one on each side of the QD 10. In this case the reflectors are arranged to form a resonator with a central frequency that is detuned from the exciton energy by several times greater than the spectral width of the resonator mode. In this way, the emission of the QD into the excitation waveguide may be “Purcell supressed”, offering potentially even greater efficiency into the collection waveguide, though at the expense of requiring additional excitation power.
[0038] Referring back to
[0039] The embodiments of
[0040] Referring back to . These two states have different energies as shown in
[0041] While the embodiment described above uses a circular quantum dot, a similar result can be achieved using an oval quantum dot as shown in
[0042] In further alternative arrangements, rather than a quantum dot 10, other types of photon emitter may be used in combination with a magnetic field. For example the photon emitter may comprise a diamond crystal with a defect, such as a nitrogen-vacancy centre or a silicon-vacancy centre. In these defects, in particular negatively charged nitrogen-vacancy centres, electrons can be excited into various exciton states which can be coupled with polarized light in the excitation and collection waveguides in the same way as described above with reference to
[0043] In either of the arrangements described above using a magnetic field, the structure of the device may be as shown in
[0044] As a further alternative to the colour centres in diamond, defects in 2D materials (e.g. hexagonal boron nitride (hBN)) may also be used as the photon emitter. In this case the photonic crystal structure similar to that of
[0045] While the use of a magnetic field to provide the split energy levels as in