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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing
Quantum Simulation
Site-controlled quantum dot arrays edge-coupled to integrated silicon nitride waveguides and devices
arXiv
Authors: John O'Hara, Nicola Maraviglia, Mack Johnson, Jesper HÃ¥kansson, Salvador Medina, Gediminas Juska, Luca Colavecchi, Frank H. Peters, Brian Corbett, Emanuele Pelucchi
Year
2025
Paper ID
16027
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
188
Citations
N/A
Abstract
The scalability of quantum photonic integrated circuits opens the path towards large-scale quantum computing and communication. To date, this scalability has been limited by the stochastic nature of the quantum light sources. Moreover, hybrid integration of different platforms will likely be necessary to combine state-of-the-art devices into a functioning architecture. Here, we demonstrate the active alignment and edge-coupling of arrays of ten site-controlled gallium arsenide quantum dots to an array of ten silicon nitride single-mode waveguides, at cryogenic temperatures. The coupling is facilitated by the fabrication of nanopillars, deterministically self-aligned around each quantum dot, leading to a high-yield and regular array of single-photon sources. An on-chip beamsplitter verifies the triggered emission of single photons into the silicon nitride chip. The low inhomogeneous broadening of the ensemble enables us to observe the spectral overlap of adjacent site-controlled emitters. Across the array of waveguides, the signal collected from each coupled quantum dot is consistently and reproducibly 0.17 relative to the free-space collection from the very same single-photon source. Comparing measurement with waveguide simulations, we infer that absolute coupling efficiencies of approx 5 \% are currently obtained between our quantum dots and the waveguides.
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Quantum Simulation research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
- It adds a 2025 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- The scalability of quantum photonic integrated circuits opens the path towards large-scale quantum computing and communication.
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