4.7 Article

Bright Electrically Controllable Quantum-Dot-Molecule Devices Fabricated by In Situ Electron-Beam Lithography

Journal

ADVANCED QUANTUM TECHNOLOGIES
Volume 4, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/qute.202100002

Keywords

circular Bragg gratings; determinsitic device fabrication; quantum dot molecules; quantum light sources; quantum memory

Funding

  1. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF)
  2. German Research Foundation (DFG) [FI947/6-1]
  3. BMBF [13N14876]
  4. Projekt DEAL

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Self-organized semiconductor quantum dots are nearly ideal two-level systems with strong potential for applications in photonic quantum technologies. Coupled quantum dot systems, with increased functionality, can host ultra-stable singlet-triplet spin qubits for efficient spin-photon interfaces and for deterministic photonic 2D cluster-state generation. Advanced quantum dot molecule (QDM) devices show excellent single-photon emission properties, making them attractive building blocks for future photonic quantum networks.
Self-organized semiconductor quantum dots represent almost ideal two-level systems, which have strong potential to applications in photonic quantum technologies. For instance, they can act as emitters in close-to-ideal quantum light sources. Coupled quantum dot systems with significantly increased functionality are potentially of even stronger interest since they can be used to host ultra-stable singlet-triplet spin qubits for efficient spin-photon interfaces and for deterministic photonic 2D cluster-state generation. An advanced quantum dot molecule (QDM) device is realized and excellent optical properties are demonstrated. The device includes electrically controllable QDMs based on stacked quantum dots in a pin-diode structure. The QDMs are deterministically integrated into a photonic structure with a circular Bragg grating using in situ electron beam lithography. A photon extraction efficiency of up to (24 +/- 4)% is measured in good agreement with numerical simulations. The coupling character of the QDMs is clearly demonstrated by bias voltage dependent spectroscopy that also controls the orbital couplings of the QDMs and their charge state in quantitative agreement with theory. The QDM devices show excellent single-photon emission properties with a multi-photon suppression of g(2)(0)=(3.9 +/- 0.5)x10-3. These metrics make the developed QDM devices attractive building blocks for use in future photonic quantum networks using advanced nanophotonic hardware.

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