4.8 Article

Spin-controlled generation of indistinguishable and distinguishable photons from silicon vacancy centres in silicon carbide

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-16330-5

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC)
  2. European Commission Marie Curie ETN QuSCo [765267]
  3. Max Planck Society
  4. Humboldt Foundation
  5. German Research Foundation [SPP 1601]
  6. Carl-Zeiss-Stiftung
  7. Swedish Research Council [VR 2016-04068]
  8. Swedish Energy Agency [43611-1]
  9. Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation [KAW 2018.0071]
  10. EU [862721]
  11. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [JSPS KAKENHI 17H01056, 18H03770]
  12. National Excellence Program of Quantum-Coherent Materials Project (Hungarian NKFIH) [KKP129866]
  13. EU QuantERA Q-Magine Project [127889]
  14. QuantERA Nanospin Project [127902]
  15. National Quantum Technology Program [2017-1.2.1-NKP-2017-00001]
  16. Marie Curie Actions (MSCA) [765267] Funding Source: Marie Curie Actions (MSCA)

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Quantum systems combining indistinguishable photon generation and spin-based quantum information processing are essential for remote quantum applications and networking. However, identification of suitable systems in scalable platforms remains a challenge. Here, we investigate the silicon vacancy centre in silicon carbide and demonstrate controlled emission of indistinguishable and distinguishable photons via coherent spin manipulation. Using strong off-resonant excitation and collecting zero-phonon line photons, we show a two-photon interference contrast close to 90% in Hong-Ou-Mandel type experiments. Further, we exploit the system's intimate spin-photon relation to spin-control the colour and indistinguishability of consecutively emitted photons. Our results provide a deep insight into the system's spin-phonon-photon physics and underline the potential of the industrially compatible silicon carbide platform for measurement-based entanglement distribution and photonic cluster state generation. Additional coupling to quantum registers based on individual nuclear spins would further allow for high-level network-relevant quantum information processing, such as error correction and entanglement purification. Defects in silicon carbide can act as single photon sources that also have the benefit of a host material that is already used in electronic devices. Here the authors demonstrate that they can control the distinguishability of the emitted photons by changing the defect spin state.

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