4.8 Review

Single organic molecules for photonic quantum technologies

Journal

NATURE MATERIALS
Volume 20, Issue 12, Pages 1615-1628

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41563-021-00987-4

Keywords

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Funding

  1. EraNET Cofund Initiatives QuantERA within the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme [731473]
  2. University Research Fellowship from the Royal Society [UF160475]
  3. EPSRC [EP/P030130/1, EP/P01058X/1, EP/R044031/1]
  4. Deutsche Forschungs gemeinschaft (DFG) [332724366, GE2737/5-1]
  5. Government of Spain [FIS2016-81044, CEX2019-000910-S]
  6. Fundacio Cellex
  7. Fundacio Mir-Puig
  8. Generalitat de Catalunya (CERCA, AGAUR) [SGR 1656]
  9. European Union [820378]
  10. NWO (The Dutch Research Council)

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Isolating single molecules in the solid state allows for fundamental experiments in basic and applied sciences, with certain molecules showing unique properties when cooled to liquid helium temperature. These molecules can serve as single-photon sources and exhibit competitive performance as nonlinear elements.
Isolating single molecules in the solid state has allowed fundamental experiments in basic and applied sciences. When cooled down to liquid helium temperature, certain molecules show transition lines that are tens of megahertz wide, limited by only the excited-state lifetime. The extreme flexibility in the synthesis of organic materials provides, at low costs, a wide palette of emission wavelengths and supporting matrices for such single chromophores. In the past few decades, their controlled coupling to photonic structures has led to an optimized interaction efficiency with light. Molecules can hence be operated as single-photon sources and as nonlinear elements with competitive performance in terms of coherence, scalability and compatibility with diverse integrated platforms. Moreover, they can be used as transducers for the optical read-out of fields and material properties, with the promise of single-quanta resolution in the sensing of charges and motion. We show that quantum emitters based on single molecules hold promise to play a key role in the development of quantum science and technologies. This Review discusses the photophysical properties and nonlinear behaviour of single molecules, and their use as single-photon sources and in single-molecule sensing and quantum-sensing applications.

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