4.7 Article

Advances in Silicon Quantum Photonics

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JSTQE.2020.3025737

Keywords

Photonics; Silicon; Couplers; Optical waveguides; Optical losses; Gratings; Quantum computing; Silicon photonics; quantum optics; quantum information processing; quantum communications

Funding

  1. VILLUM FONDEN, QUANPIC [00025298]
  2. Centre of ExcellenceSPOC -Silicon Photonics for Optical Communications [DNRF123]
  3. People Programme (Marie Curie Actions) of the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) under REA [609405]
  4. National Key RAMP
  5. D Program of China [2019YFA0308702]
  6. Natural Science Foundation of China [61975001]
  7. Beijing Natural Science Foundation [Z190005]
  8. Key RAMP
  9. D Program of Guangdong Province [2018B030329001]

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Quantum technology is poised to revolutionize computing, communications and sensing capabilities, with photons being crucial carriers of quantum information. The system requires thousands of near-transparent components with ultra-low-latency control, and the development of a new paradigm photonic system is needed to meet these requirements.
Quantum technology is poised to enable a step change in human capability for computing, communications and sensing. Photons are indispensable as carriers of quantum information-they travel at the fastest possible speed and readily protected from decoherence. However, the system requires thousands of near-transparent components with ultra-low-latency control. To be implemented, a new paradigm photonic system is required: one with in-built coherence, stability, the ability to define arbitrary circuits, and a path to manufacturability. Silicon photonics has unparalleled density and component performance, which, with CMOS compatible fabrication, place it in a strong position for a scalable quantum photonics platform. This paper is a progress report on silicon quantum photonics, focused on developments in the past five years. We provide an introduction on silicon quantum photonic component and the challenges in the field, summarise the current state-of-the-art and identify outstanding technical challenges, as well as promising avenues of future research. We also resolve a conflict in the definition of Hong-Ou-Mandel interference visibility in integrated quantum photonic experiments, needed for fair comparison of photon quality across different platforms. Our aim is the development of scalability on the platform, to which end we point the way to ever-closer integration, toward silicon quantum photonic systems-on-a-chip.

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