| Literature DB >> 25629223 |
Luozhou Li1, Tim Schröder1, Edward H Chen1, Michael Walsh1, Igal Bayn1, Jordan Goldstein1, Ophir Gaathon1, Matthew E Trusheim1, Ming Lu2, Jacob Mower1, Mircea Cotlet2, Matthew L Markham3, Daniel J Twitchen3, Dirk Englund1.
Abstract
A central aim of quantum information processing is the efficient entanglement of multiple stationary quantum memories via photons. Among solid-state systems, the nitrogen-vacancy centre in diamond has emerged as an excellent optically addressable memory with second-scale electron spin coherence times. Recently, quantum entanglement and teleportation have been shown between two nitrogen-vacancy memories, but scaling to larger networks requires more efficient spin-photon interfaces such as optical resonators. Here we report such nitrogen-vacancy-nanocavity systems in the strong Purcell regime with optical quality factors approaching 10,000 and electron spin coherence times exceeding 200 μs using a silicon hard-mask fabrication process. This spin-photon interface is integrated with on-chip microwave striplines for coherent spin control, providing an efficient quantum memory for quantum networks.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25629223 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms7173
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919