4.7 Article

Quantum photonic integrated circuits based on tunable dots and tunable cavities

Journal

APL PHOTONICS
Volume 3, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/1.5039961

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Dutch Technology Foundation STW
  2. Technology Program of the Ministry of Economic Affairs [10380, 12662]
  3. NanoNextNL, a micro and nanotechnology program of the Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs, Agriculture and Innovation
  4. Netherlands organization for Scientific Research (NWO)
  5. Applied Science Division of NWO

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Quantum photonic integrated circuits hold great potential as a novel class of semiconductor technologies that exploit the evolution of a quantum state of light to manipulate information. Quantum dots encapsulated in photonic crystal structures are promising single-photon sources that can be integrated within these circuits. However, the unavoidable energy mismatch between distant cavities and dots, along with the difficulties in coupling to a waveguide network, has hampered the implementation of circuits manipulating single photons simultaneously generated by remote sources. Here we present a waveguide architecture that combines electromechanical actuation and Stark-tuning to reconfigure the state of distinct cavity-emitter nodes on a chip. The Purcell-enhancement from an electrically controlled exciton coupled to a ridge waveguide is reported. Besides, using this platform, we implement an integrated Hanbury-Twiss and Brown experiment with a source and a splitter on the same chip. These results open new avenues to scale the number of indistinguishable single photons produced on-demand by distinct emitters. (C) 2018 Author(s).

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