359 results on '"Philip J. Poole"'
Search Results
352. Nanowire-based sources of non-classical light.
- Author
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Dan Dalacu, Philip J Poole, and Robin L Williams
- Subjects
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LIGHT sources , *PHOTONS , *BELL'S theorem , *SEMICONDUCTOR nanowires , *QUANTUM information science - Abstract
Sources of quantum light that utilize photonic nanowire designs have emerged as potential candidates for high efficiency non-classical light generation in quantum information processing. In this review we cover the different platforms used to produce nanowire-based sources, highlighting the importance of waveguide design and material properties in achieving optimal performance. The limitations of the sources are identified and routes to optimization are proposed. State-of-the-art nanowire sources are compared to other solid-state quantum emitter platforms with regard to the key metrics of single photon purity, indistinguishability and entangled-pair fidelity to maximally entangled Bell states. We also discuss the unique ability of the nanowire platform to incorporate multiple emitters in the same optical mode and consider potential applications. Finally, routes to on-chip integration are discussed and the challenges facing the development of a nanowire-based scalable architecture are presented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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353. Metal-dielectric waveguide facet coatings
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Zhenguo Lu, Juan A. Caballero, Daniel Poitras, Philip J. Poole, Penghui Ma, Pierre G. Verly, Jiaren Liu, and Pedro Barrios
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Facet (geometry) ,Materials science ,business.industry ,Reflectivity ,Semiconductor laser theory ,Metal ,Optics ,Narrowband ,visual_art ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Optoelectronics ,Wideband ,business ,Dielectric waveguides - Abstract
We present the application of metal-dielectric coatings on the facet of waveguides for the control of the modal reflectance with narrowband and wideband mirrors.
354. High performance InAs/InP C-Band quantum dot coherence frequency comb lasers
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Siegfried Janz, Shoude Chang, H. P. Ding, Daniel Poitras, J.R. Liu, C. Y. Song, Philip J. Poole, Pedro Barrios, C. Flueraru, and Z. G. Lu
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Materials science ,Physics::Optics ,Semiconductor laser theory ,law.invention ,Condensed Matter::Materials Science ,Frequency comb ,Optics ,law ,Frequency-comb laser ,InAs/InP ,Output power ,Semiconductor quantum dots ,Quantum well ,100 GHz ,InAs/InP quantum dots ,business.industry ,Nonlinear optics ,Condensed Matter::Mesoscopic Systems and Quantum Hall Effect ,Laser ,Quantum dot laser ,Quantum dot ,Frequency spacing ,C-band coherence ,Optoelectronics ,business ,Coherence (physics) - Abstract
We have experimentally demonstrated several InAs/InP quantum dot C-band coherence frequency comb lasers with the frequency spacing from 10 GHz to 100 GHz with the total output power of up to 50 mW. © 2013 Optical Society of America., CLEO: Science and Innovations, CLEO_SI 2013, 9 June 2013 through 14 June 2013, San Jose, CA
355. Low noise InAs/InP quantum dot C-band monolithic multiwavelength lasers for WDM-PONs
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G. Pakulski, Sylvain Raymond, Trevor J. Hall, Pedro Barrios, Xiupu Zhang, Philip J. Poole, Jiaren Liu, Karin Hinzer, Z. G. Lu, and Daniel Poitras
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Materials science ,C band ,business.industry ,Optical communication ,Physics::Optics ,Laser ,Passive optical network ,law.invention ,Semiconductor laser theory ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Optics ,chemistry ,Quantum dot ,law ,Wavelength-division multiplexing ,Optoelectronics ,Indium arsenide ,business - Abstract
Wavelength-division-multiplexed passive optical networks (WDM-PONs) are an attractive solution for future broadband access networks because of various advantages including large capacity, network security, protocol transparency, and upgradeability. However, the WDM-PON is still an expensive solution to implement mainly due to the high cost of WDM sources. To construct a cost-effective and multichannel WDM system, a low-cost multiwavelength laser (MWL) source is a promising candidate because it replaces multiple discrete laser arrays and reduces the management overhead. There have been many approaches to obtain MWLs such as based on rare-earth-doped fiber amplification, quantum-well (QW) semiconductor optical amplifiers and stimulated Raman scattering. However, those resulting MWLs have not performed well in term of channel number, intensity uniformity, size and stability mostly due to the use of homogeneous gain materials. The Fabry-Perot (F-P) based semiconductor laser as a MWL in WDM-PONs has been something of a ‘holy grail,’ but noisy longitudinal lasing modes in bulk or QW semiconductor FP lasers due to their strong longitudinal mode competitions made them a ‘no-go.’ In recent years, InAs/InP quantum-dot (QD) gain materials operating at the most important telecom C-band wavelength range from 1530 nm to 1566 nm offers many new possibilities for QD lasers in terms of broader spectral bandwidth, higher temperature stability, and lower power consumption than QW or bulk lasers. The suitability of QD lasers for multi-wavelength operation with better performance lies in the facts such as spectral hole-burning in broad inhomogeneous gain of QDs and spatial hole-burning in an F-P cavity. Its inhomogeneous broadening of gain spectrum stems from statistically distributed sizes and geometries of self-assembled QDs, and its 3-dB bandwidth of up to 150 nm could be easily achievable, which provides a base for uniform and stable multi-channel operation. Each of lasing modes selected by an F-P cavity extracts only electrons in QDs resonant with the wavelength of that mode, depletes electrons in these QDs with the corresponding dot sizes. Because QDs are spatially isolated and only interact via wetting layers, the supply of electrons that remain in the material surrounding QDs helps the realization of ultrafast gain recovery to suppress gain fluctuation. Consequently, each mode consumes population inversion of differently localized carriers. This fast-recovery ultra-wide inhomogeneous broadening, as well as traditional spatial hole-burning inside a standing-wave cavity, will principally support stable multi-wavelength operation with high channel number and high uniformity of channel intensities, 2009 Conference on Optical Fiber Communication, 22-26 March 2009, San Diego, California, US
356. Polarization entangled photons from quantum dots embedded in nanowires
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Ana Predojević, Hamed Majedi, Tobias B. Huber, Philip J. Poole, Milad Khoshnegar, Dan Dalacu, and Gregor Weihs
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Single mode fibers ,Light ,Nanowire ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Physics::Optics ,Bioengineering ,Novel structures ,Quantum entanglement ,High collection efficiency ,Photon entanglement ,Polarization-entangled photons ,Polarization ,Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics (cond-mat.mes-hall) ,Semiconductor quantum dots ,General Materials Science ,Extraction efficiencies ,Biexciton ,Physics ,Quantum optics ,Detector efficiency ,Quantum Physics ,Maximally entangled state ,Polarization entanglement ,Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics ,Nanowires ,business.industry ,Biexcitons ,Mechanical Engineering ,Avalanche diodes ,Single-mode optical fiber ,General Chemistry ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Avalanche photodiode ,Condensed Matter::Mesoscopic Systems and Quantum Hall Effect ,Quantum dot ,Optoelectronics ,business ,Quantum Physics (quant-ph) - Abstract
In this Letter, we present entanglement generated from a novel structure: a single InAsP quantum dot embedded in an InP nanowire. These structures can grow in a site-controlled way and exhibit high collection efficiency; we detect 0.5 million biexciton counts per second coupled into a single mode fiber with a standard commercial avalanche photo diode. If we correct for the known setup losses and detector efficiency, we get an extraction efficiency of 15(3) %. For the measured polarization entanglement, we observe a fidelity of 0.76(2) to a reference maximally entangled state as well as a concurrence of 0.57(6).
357. Coupling to Ultra-small Nanocavities for Single-Photon Source Applications via Tapered Nanowire Micro-loops.
- Author
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Christian Grillet, Cameron Smith, David J. Moss, Benjamin Eggleton, Simon Frederick, Dan Dalacu, Philip J. Poole, Jean Lapointe, Geof Aers, and Robin L. Williams
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- 2006
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358. Initialization of a spin qubit in a site-controlled nanowire quantum dot.
- Author
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Konstantinos G Lagoudakis, Peter L McMahon, Kevin A Fischer, Shruti Puri, Kai Müller, Dan Dalacu, Philip J Poole, Michael E Reimer, Val Zwiller, Yoshihisa Yamamoto, and Jelena Vučković
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QUANTUM dots ,NANOWIRES ,QUANTUM computers - Abstract
A fault-tolerant quantum repeater or quantum computer using solid-state spin-based quantum bits will likely require a physical implementation with many spins arranged in a grid. Self-assembled quantum dots (QDs) have been established as attractive candidates for building spin-based quantum information processing devices, but such QDs are randomly positioned, which makes them unsuitable for constructing large-scale processors. Recent efforts have shown that QDs embedded in nanowires can be deterministically positioned in regular arrays, can store single charges, and have excellent optical properties, but so far there have been no demonstrations of spin qubit operations using nanowire QDs. Here we demonstrate optical pumping of individual spins trapped in site-controlled nanowire QDs, resulting in high-fidelity spin-qubit initialization. This represents the next step towards establishing spins in nanowire QDs as quantum memories suitable for use in a large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computer or repeater based on all-optical control of the spin qubits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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359. Design and validation of a-SiC/SiN hybrid photonic platform for integrated quantum photonics
- Author
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Naresh Sharma, Zizheng Li, Bruno Lopez-Rodriguez, Joey Vrugt, Stijn van der Waal, Luozhen Li, Roald van der Kolk, Philip J Poole, Dan Dalacu, and Iman Esmaeil Zadeh
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quantum dots ,single photon ,quantum photonic integrated circuits ,superconducting nanowire single photon detectors ,silicon carbide ,Atomic physics. Constitution and properties of matter ,QC170-197 ,Materials of engineering and construction. Mechanics of materials ,TA401-492 - Abstract
Recent efforts in quantum photonics emphasize on-chip generation, manipulation, and detection of single photons for quantum computing and quantum communication. In quantum photonic chips, single photons are often generated using parametric down-conversion and quantum dots. Quantum dots are particularly attractive due to their on-demand generation of high-purity single photons. Different photonic platforms are used to manipulate the states of the photons. Nevertheless, no single platform satisfies all the requirements of quantum photonics, as each platform has its merits and shortcomings. For example, the thin-film silicon nitride (SiN) platform provides ultra-low loss on the order of 0.1 dB m ^−1 , but is incompatible with dense integration , requiring large bending radii. On the other hand, silicon on insulator offers a high refractive index contrast for dense integration but has a high absorption coefficient at the emission wavelengths (800–970 nm) of state-of-the-art QDs. Amorphous silicon carbide (a-SiC) has emerged as an alternative with a high refractive index (higher than SiN), an extended transparency window compared to Silicon, and a thermo-optic coefficient three times higher than that of SiN, which is crucial for tuning photonic devices on a chip. With the vision of realizing a quantum photonic integrated circuit, we explore the hybrid integration of SiN/a-SiC photonic platform with quantum dots and superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors. We validate our hybrid platform using a brief literature study, proof-of-principle experiments, and complementary simulations. As a proof-of-principle, we show a quantum dot embedded in nanowires (for deterministic micro-transfer and better integration) that emits single photons at 885 nm with a purity of 0.011 and a lifetime of 0.98 ns. Furthermore, we design and simulate an adiabatic coupler between two photonic platforms, a-SiC and SiN, by aiming to use the benefits of both platforms, i.e. dense integration and low losses, respectively. Our design couples the light from SiN waveguide to a-SiC waveguide with 96% efficiency at 885 nm wavelength. Our hybrid platform can be used to demonstrate on-chip quantum experiments such as Hong–Ou–Mandel, where we can design a large optical delay line in SiN and an interference circuit in a-SiC.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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