Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS March Meeting 2022
Volume 67, Number 3
Monday–Friday, March 14–18, 2022; Chicago
Session K67: Quantum Emitters and Spin Devices
3:00 PM–5:36 PM,
Tuesday, March 15, 2022
Room: Hyatt Regency Hotel -Hyde Park
Sponsoring
Unit:
DMP
Chair: Shannon Harvey, Stanford University; Xiangzhi Li
Abstract: K67.00008 : High-coherence integrated nanophotonic multi-spin-photon interface based on silicon vacancies in silicon carbide
4:24 PM–4:36 PM
Presenter:
Florian Kaiser
(University of Stuttgart)
Authors:
Florian Kaiser
(University of Stuttgart)
Charles Babin
(University of Stuttgart)
Rainer Stöhr
(University of Stuttgart)
Naoya Morioka
(University of Stuttgart)
Tobias Linkewitz
(University of Stuttgart)
Timo Steidl
(University of Stuttgart)
Raphael Wörnle
(University of Stuttgart)
Di Liu
(University of Stuttgart)
Erik Hesselmeier
(University of Stuttgart)
Vadim Vorobyov
(University of Stuttgart)
Andrej Denisenko
(University of Stuttgart)
Mario Hentschel
(University of Stuttgart)
Christian Gobert
(IISB Erlangen)
Patrick Berwian
(IISB Erlangen)
Georgy V Astakhov
(HZDR Dresden)
Wolfgang Knolle
(IOM Leipzig)
Sridhar Majety
(University of California, Davis)
Pranta Saha
(University of California, Davis)
Marina Radulaski
(University of California, Davis)
Nguyen Tien Son
(Linköping University)
Jawad Ul Hassan
(Linköping University)
J. Wrachtrup
(University of Stuttgart)
To claim system scalability, the field has yet to improve the interaction between color centers and photons. While cavity-enhanced light-matter interaction was implemented on multiple platforms, the major challenge is to preserve spin-optical coherence and, simultaneously, grant high-fidelity access to qubit clusters, such as nuclear spins.
Here, we highlight that color centers in semiconductor silicon carbide (SiC) are a promising platform to solve these challenges.
We introduce nanofabrication of silicon vacancy centers (VSi) in 4H-SiC without deterioration of their excellent spin-optical properties. We show nearly lifetime limited optical absorption lines and record spin coherence times for single defects generated via ion implantation and in SiC waveguides.
Thanks to our system’s exceptionally high operation temperature (T = 20 K), we further use waveguide-integrated VSi centers to control two nearby nuclear spin qubits with fidelities up to 98%.
Our work shows that VSi centers in SiC are very attractive for developing next-generation large-scale quantum networks based on integrated quantum computational clusters with efficient spin-photon interfaces.
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