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Now showing 1 - 8 of 8
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    First Terahertz-range Experiments on Pump – Probe Setup at Novosibirsk free Electron Laser
    (Amsterdam [u.a.] : Elsevier, 2016) Choporova, Yulia Yu.; Gerasimov, Vasily V.; Knyazev, Boris A.; Sergeev, Sergey M.; Shevchenko, Oleg A.; Zhukavin, Roman K.; Abrosimov, Nikolay V.; Kovalevsky, Konstantin A.; Ovchar, Vladimir K.; Hübers, Heinz-Wilhelm; Kulipanov, Gennady N.; Shastin, Valery N.; Schneider, Harald; Vinokurov, Nikolay A.
    A single-color pump-probe system has been commissioned at the Novosibirsk free electron laser. The laser emits a tunable monochromatic terahertz radiation. To prove the proper system operation, we investigated the time-resolved absorption of a sample of n-type germanium doped with antimony, which was previously investigated at the FELBE facility, in the temperature range from 5 to 40 K. The measured relaxation time amounted to about 1.7 ns, which agreed with the results obtained at the FELBE. The results of pump-probe measurements of non-equilibrium dynamics of hot electrons in the germanium crystal at cryogenic temperatures are presented for wavelengths of 105, 141 and 150 μm.
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    Characterization of the Si:Se+ Spin-Photon Interface
    (College Park, Md. [u.a.] : American Physical Society, 2019) DeAbreu, Adam; Bowness, Camille; Abraham, Rohan J.S.; Medvedova, Alzbeta; Morse, Kevin J.; Riemann, Helge; Abrosimov, Nikolay V.; Becker, Peter; Pohl, Hans-Joachim; Thewalt, Michael L.W.; Simmons, Stephanie
    Silicon is the most-developed electronic and photonic technological platform and hosts some of the highest-performance spin and photonic qubits developed to date. A hybrid quantum technology harnessing an efficient spin-photon interface in silicon would unlock considerable potential by enabling ultralong-lived photonic memories, distributed quantum networks, microwave-to-optical photon converters, and spin-based quantum processors, all linked with integrated silicon photonics. However, the indirect band gap of silicon makes identification of efficient spin-photon interfaces nontrivial. Here we build upon the recent identification of chalcogen donors as a promising spin-photon interface in silicon. We determine that the spin-dependent optical degree of freedom has a transition dipole moment stronger than previously thought [here 1.96(8) D], and the spin T1 lifetime in low magnetic fields is longer than previously thought [here longer than 4.6(1.5) h]. We furthermore determine the optical excited-state lifetime [7.7(4) ns], and therefore the natural radiative efficiency [0.80(9)%], and by measuring the phonon sideband determine the zero-phonon emission fraction [16(1)%]. Taken together, these parameters indicate that an integrated quantum optoelectronic platform based on chalcogen-donor qubits in silicon is well within reach of current capabilities.
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    Wafer-scale nanofabrication of telecom single-photon emitters in silicon
    ([London] : Nature Publishing Group UK, 2022) Hollenbach, Michael; Klingner, Nico; Jagtap, Nagesh S.; Bischoff, Lothar; Fowley, Ciarán; Kentsch, Ulrich; Hlawacek, Gregor; Erbe, Artur; Abrosimov, Nikolay V.; Helm, Manfred; Berencén, Yonder; Astakhov, Georgy V.
    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.
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    Author Correction: Low-frequency spin qubit energy splitting noise in highly purified 28Si/SiGe (npj Quantum Information, (2020), 6, 1, (40), 10.1038/s41534-020-0276-2)
    (London : Nature Publ. Group, 2020) Struck, Tom; Hollmann, Arne; Schauer, Floyd; Fedorets, Olexiy; Schmidbauer, Andreas; Sawano, Kentarou; Riemann, Helge; Abrosimov, Nikolay V.; Cywiński, Łukasz; Bougeard, Dominique; Schreiber, Lars R.
    The original version of this Article omitted the following from the Acknowledgements: “This work has also been funded by the National Science Centre, Poland under QuantERA program, Grant No. 2017/25/Z/ST3/03044.” This has now been corrected in both the PDF and HTML versions of the Article. © 2020, The Author(s).
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    Low-frequency spin qubit energy splitting noise in highly purified 28Si/SiGe
    (London : Nature Publ. Group, 2020) Struck, Tom; Hollmann, Arne; Schauer, Floyd; Fedorets, Olexiy; Schmidbauer, Andreas; Sawano, Kentarou; Riemann, Helge; Abrosimov, Nikolay V.; Cywiński, Łukasz; Bougeard, Dominique; Schreiber, Lars R.
    We identify the dominant source for low-frequency spin qubit splitting noise in a highly isotopically-purified silicon device with an embedded nanomagnet and a spin echo decay time T2echo = 128 µs. The power spectral density (PSD) of the charge noise explains both, the clear transition from a 1/f2- to a 1/f-dependence of the splitting noise PSD as well as the experimental observation of a decreasing time-ensemble spin dephasing time, from T2*˜ 20 µs, with increasing measurement time over several hours. Despite their strong hyperfine contact interaction, the few 73Ge nuclei overlapping with the quantum dot in the barrier do not limit T2*, likely because their dynamics is frozen on a few hours measurement scale. We conclude that charge noise and the design of the gradient magnetic field are the key to further improve the qubit fidelity in isotopically purified 28Si/SiGe. © 2020, The Author(s).
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    Indium‐Doped Silicon for Solar Cells—Light‐Induced Degradation and Deep‐Level Traps
    (Weinheim : Wiley-VCH, 2021) De Guzman, Joyce Ann T.; Markevich, Vladimir P.; Hawkins, Ian D.; Ayedh, Hussein M.; Coutinho, José; Binns, Jeff; Falster, Robert; Abrosimov, Nikolay V.; Crowe, Iain F.; Halsall, Matthew P.; Peaker, Anthony R.
    Indium-doped silicon is considered a possible p-type material for solar cells to avoid light-induced degradation (LID), which occurs in cells made from boron-doped Czochralski (Cz) silicon. Herein, the defect reactions associated with indium-related LID are examined and a deep donor is detected, which is attributed to a negative-U defect believed to be InsO2. In the presence of minority carriers or above bandgap light, the deep donor transforms to a shallow acceptor. An analogous transformation in boron-doped material is related to the BsO2 defect that is a precursor of the center responsible for BO LID. The electronic properties of InsO2 are determined and compared to those of the BsO2 defect. Structures of the BsO2 and InsO2 defects in different charges states are found using first-principles modeling. The results of the modeling can explain both the similarities and the differences between the BsO2 and InsO2 properties.
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    A photonic platform for donor spin qubits in silicon
    (Washington, DC [u.a.] : Assoc., 2017) Morse, Kevin J.; Abraham, Rohan J. S.; DeAbreu, Adam; Bowness, Camille; Richards, Timothy S.; Riemann, Helge; Abrosimov, Nikolay V.; Becker, Peter; Pohl, Hans-Joachim; Thewalt, Michael L. W.; Simmons, Stephanie
    Donor spins in silicon are highly competitive qubits for upcoming quantum technologies, offering complementary metal-oxide semiconductor compatibility, coherence (T2) times of minutes to hours, and simultaneous initialization, manipulation, and readout fidelities near ~99.9%. This allows for many quantum error correction protocols, which will be essential for scale-up. However, a proven method of reliably coupling spatially separated donor qubits has yet to be identified. We present a scalable silicon-based platform using the unique optical properties of “deep” chalcogen donors. For the prototypical 77Se+ donor, we measure lower bounds on the transition dipole moment and excited-state lifetime, enabling access to the strong coupling limit of cavity quantum electrodynamics using known silicon photonic resonator technology and integrated silicon photonics. We also report relatively strong photon emission from this same transition. These results unlock clear pathways for silicon-based quantum computing, spin-to-photon conversion, photonic memories, integrated single-photon sources, and all-optical switches.
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    Electronic Properties and Structure of Boron–Hydrogen Complexes in Crystalline Silicon
    (Weinheim : Wiley-VCH, 2021-9-17) De Guzman, Joyce Ann T.; Markevich, Vladimir P.; Coutinho, José; Abrosimov, Nikolay V.; Halsall, Matthew P.; Peaker, Anthony R.
    The subject of hydrogen–boron interactions in crystalline silicon is revisited with reference to light and elevated temperature-induced degradation (LeTID) in boron-doped solar silicon. Ab initio modeling of structure, binding energy, and electronic properties of complexes incorporating a substitutional boron and one or two hydrogen atoms is performed. From the calculations, it is confirmed that a BH pair is electrically inert. It is found that boron can bind two H atoms. The resulting BH2 complex is a donor with a transition level estimated at E c–0.24 eV. Experimentally, the electrically active defects in n-type Czochralski-grown Si crystals co-doped with phosphorus and boron, into which hydrogen is introduced by different methods, are investigated using junction capacitance techniques. In the deep-level transient spectroscopy (DLTS) spectra of hydrogenated Si:P + B crystals subjected to heat-treatments at 100 °C under reverse bias, an electron emission signal with an activation energy of ≈0.175 eV is detected. The trap is a donor with electronic properties close to those predicted for boron–dihydrogen. The donor character of BH2 suggests that it can be a very efficient recombination center of minority carriers in B-doped p-type Si crystals. A sequence of boron–hydrogen reactions, which can be related to the LeTID effect in Si:B is proposed.