On-chip integration of site controlled hBN quantum emitters in a low-emission silicon nitride platform
ORAL
Abstract
Single-photon emitters hosted by atomically thin two-dimensional (2D) materials have proven very attractive with high brightness, ambient condition operation, and site-specific engineering. Integrating single photons in 2D hosts with photonic circuits is a central building block for quantum photonics to enhance spectral properties, light-matter interactions, and indistinguishability. Here, we present novel prototypes for integrating room-temperature single-photon emitters in hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) to low-loss, low-emission silicon nitride photonic integrated circuits. Our platform features an optimized approach that couples more than 50% of the generated single-photons to the waveguide's optical mode, microring resonators for Purcell enhancement, and chip-to-fiber coupling. Additionally, a precise alignment of the quantum defects is achieved by combining two sets of global and local alignment marks enabling diffraction-limited accuracy of their positioning on the target chip. This integrated platform is a vital step towards scalable photonic quantum circuits. In the future, the Stark effect can be exploited for efficient spectral tunability, enabling a deterministic control of the single photon's spatio-temporal and spectral properties and their coupling to resonators.
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Publication: [1] K. Parto, S. I. Azzam, K. Banerjee and G. Moody, Nature Communications 12.1, 1-8 (2021).<br>[2] S. I. Azzam, K. Parto, and G. Moody, Applied Physics Letters 118.24, 240502 (2021).<br>
Presenters
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Shaimaa Azzam
University of California, Santa Barbara
Authors
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Shaimaa Azzam
University of California, Santa Barbara
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Kamyar Parto
University of California, Santa Barbara
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Nicholas Lewis
University of California Santa Barbara
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Galan Moody
University of California, Santa Barbara