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Erbium-Implanted Materials for Quantum Communication

ORAL

Abstract

Erbium-doped materials can form spin-photon interfaces wwith optical transitions in the 1.5μm telecom window, making them an exciting class of materials for long-distance quantum communication (QC). Advances in nanophotonic integration have enabled the observation and manipulation of single Er3+ ions, a key result for constructing quantum repeaters. However, these single-ion experiments have also highlighted materials challenges, such as spectral diffusion and magnetic noise-limited spin coherence times.

Using ion-implantation, we introduce Er3+ into a wide array of host materials in a surface-specific manner suited to nanophotonic integration. This approach allows us not only to readily identify a number of promising candidates for QC applications, but also enables us to explore the effect of materials properties, such as symmetry and lattice parameter, on the QC-relevant properties of the implanted Er3+. The principles we develop here can be extended beyond Er3+, to other rare-earth ions, transition metals, and color centers.

Presenters

  • Paul Stevenson

    Physics, Northeastern University, Princeton University

Authors

  • Paul Stevenson

    Physics, Northeastern University, Princeton University

  • Christopher Phenicie

    Princeton University

  • Sacha Welinski

    Princeton University, Thales Group

  • Isaiah Gray

    Cornell University, Princeton University

  • Sebastian Horvath

    Princeton University

  • Austin Ferrenti

    Princeton University

  • Robert Cava

    Princeton University, Department of Chemistry, Princeton University

  • Stephen Aplin Lyon

    Princeton University

  • Nathalie De Leon

    Princeton University

  • Jeff Thompson

    Princeton University