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Superconducting Qubits
Photonic Quantum Computing
1.25 GHz sine wave gating InGaAs/InP single-photon detector with monolithically integrated readout circuit
arXiv
Authors: Wen-Hao Jiang, Jian-Hong Liu, Yin Liu, Ge Jin, Jun Zhang, Jian-Wei Pan
Year
2017
Paper ID
25237
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
175
Citations
N/A
Abstract
InGaAs/InP single-photon detectors (SPDs) are the key devices for applications requiring near-infrared single-photon detection. Gating mode is an effective approach to synchronous single-photon detection. Increasing gating frequency and reducing module size are important challenges for the design of such detector system. Here we present for the first time an InGaAs/InP SPD with 1.25 GHz sine wave gating using a monolithically integrated readout circuit (MIRC). The MIRC has a size of 15 mm * 15 mm and implements the miniaturization of avalanche extraction for high-frequency sine wave gating. In the MIRC, low-pass filters and a low-noise radio frequency amplifier are integrated based on the technique of low temperature co-fired ceramic, which can effectively reduce the parasitic capacitance and extract weak avalanche signals. We then characterize the InGaAs/InP SPD to verify the functionality and reliability of MIRC, and the SPD exhibits excellent performance with 27.5 % photon detection efficiency, 1.2 kcps dark count rate, and 9.1 % afterpulse probability at 223 K and 100 ns hold-off time. With this MIRC, one can further design miniaturized high-frequency SPD modules that are highly required for practical applications.
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Superconducting Qubits research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
- It adds a 2017 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- InGaAs/InP single-photon detectors (SPDs) are the key devices for applications requiring near-infrared single-photon detection.
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