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Photonic Quantum Computing
Quantum Chemistry
Vapor Phase Assembly of Molecular Emitter Crystals for Photonic Integrated Circuits
arXiv
Authors: Arya D. Keni, Christian M. Lange, Adhyyan S. Mansukhani, Emma Daggett, Ankit Kundu, Ishita Agarwal, Patrick Bak, Benjamin Cerjan, Jonathan D. Hood
Year
2026
Paper ID
15768
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
131
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Organic molecules embedded in an organic matrix exhibit lifetime-limited optical coherence and bright emission at cryogenic temperatures below 3 K. Here we present a simple vapor-phase growth method for synthesizing optically thin DBT-doped anthracene crystals that are compatible with integrated nanophotonics. The crystals are 200 nm thick with sub-nm surface roughness and a tunable lateral dimension of up to 200 μm. The molecular transitions remain narrow and spectrally stable, with inhomogeneous broadening below 100 GHz, comparable to DBT in bulk anthracene. The dopant density is tunable up to several hundred molecules per μm2, ensuring emitters within the near-field of nanophotonic structures. We demonstrate that the crystals can be micropositioned onto integrated photonic devices with the molecular dipole aligned to the optical mode. This approach opens a path toward on-chip single-photon sources and collective many-emitter effects.
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- This paper contributes to the Quantum Chemistry research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
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- Organic molecules embedded in an organic matrix exhibit lifetime-limited optical coherence and bright emission at cryogenic temperatures below 3 K.
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