Wafer-scale nanofabrication of telecom single-photon emitters in silicon

Abstract

A highly promising route to scale millions of qubits is to use quantum photonic integrated circuits (PICs), where deterministic photon sources, reconfigurable optical elements, and single-photon detectors are monolithically integrated on the same silicon chip. The isolation of single-photon emitters, such as the G centers and W centers, in the optical telecommunication O-band, has recently been realized in silicon. In all previous cases, however, single-photon emitters were created uncontrollably in random locations, preventing their scalability. Here, we report the controllable fabrication of single G and W centers in silicon wafers using focused ion beams (FIB) with high probability. We also implement a scalable, broad-beam implantation protocol compatible with the complementary-metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) technology to fabricate single telecom emitters at desired positions on the nanoscale. Our findings unlock a clear and easily exploitable pathway for industrial-scale photonic quantum processors with technology nodes below 100 nm.

Description
Keywords
probability, quantum mechanics, silicon, telecommunication
Citation
Hollenbach, M., Klingner, N., Jagtap, N. S., Bischoff, L., Fowley, C., Kentsch, U., et al. (2022). Wafer-scale nanofabrication of telecom single-photon emitters in silicon. 13(1). https://doi.org//10.1038/s41467-022-35051-5
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License
CC BY 4.0 Unported