Search Results

Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
  • Item
    Publisher Correction: Coherent interaction of atoms with a beam of light confined in a light cage
    (London : Nature Publishing Group, 2021) Davidson-Marquis, Flavie; Gargiulo, Julian; Gómez-López, Esteban; Jang, Bumjoon; Kroh, Tim; Müller, Chris; Ziegler, Mario; Maier, Stefan A.; Kübler, Harald; Schmidt, Markus A.; Benson, Oliver
    [no abstract available: correction of https://doi.org/10.1038/s41377-021-00556-z published online 31 May 2021; After publication of this article, it is noticed the article contained an error. In Table 1, the data in the line ‘Length (mm)’ is missing. The complete Table 1 is provided in this correction.]
  • Item
    Wafer-level uniformity of atomic-layer-deposited niobium nitride thin films for quantum devices
    (New York, NY : Inst., 2021) Knehr, Emanuel; Ziegler, Mario; Linzen, Sven; Ilin, Konstantin; Schanz, Patrick; Plentz, Jonathan; Diegel, Marco; Schmidt, Heidemarie; Il’iche, Evgeni; Siegel, Michael
    Superconducting niobium nitride thin films are used for a variety of photon detectors, quantum devices, and superconducting electronics. Most of these applications require highly uniform films, for instance, when moving from single-pixel detectors to arrays with a large active area. Plasma-enhanced atomic layer deposition (ALD) of superconducting niobium nitride is a feasible option to produce high-quality, conformal thin films and has been demonstrated as a film deposition method to fabricate superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors before. Here, we explore the property spread of ALD-NbN across a 6-in. wafer area. Over the equivalent area of a 2-in. wafer, we measure a maximum deviation of 1% in critical temperature and 12% in switching current. Toward larger areas, structural characterizations indicate that changes in the crystal structure seem to be the limiting factor rather than film composition or impurities. The results show that ALD is suited to fabricate NbN thin films as a material for large-area detector arrays and for new detector designs and devices requiring uniform superconducting thin films with precise thickness control.
  • Item
    Coherent interaction of atoms with a beam of light confined in a light cage
    (London : Nature Publishing Group, 2021) Davidson-Marquis, Flavie; Gargiulo, Julian; Gómez-López, Esteban; Jang, Bumjoon; Kroh, Tim; Müller, Chris; Ziegler, Mario; Maier, Stefan A.; Kübler, Harald; Schmidt, Markus A.; Benson, Oliver
    Controlling coherent interaction between optical fields and quantum systems in scalable, integrated platforms is essential for quantum technologies. Miniaturised, warm alkali-vapour cells integrated with on-chip photonic devices represent an attractive system, in particular for delay or storage of a single-photon quantum state. Hollow-core fibres or planar waveguides are widely used to confine light over long distances enhancing light-matter interaction in atomic-vapour cells. However, they suffer from inefficient filling times, enhanced dephasing for atoms near the surfaces, and limited light-matter overlap. We report here on the observation of modified electromagnetically induced transparency for a non-diffractive beam of light in an on-chip, laterally-accessible hollow-core light cage. Atomic layer deposition of an alumina nanofilm onto the light-cage structure was utilised to precisely tune the high-transmission spectral region of the light-cage mode to the operation wavelength of the atomic transition, while additionally protecting the polymer against the corrosive alkali vapour. The experiments show strong, coherent light-matter coupling over lengths substantially exceeding the Rayleigh range. Additionally, the stable non-degrading performance and extreme versatility of the light cage provide an excellent basis for a manifold of quantum-storage and quantum-nonlinear applications, highlighting it as a compelling candidate for all-on-chip, integrable, low-cost, vapour-based photon delay.