| Literature DB >> 30291249 |
Junfeng Wang1, Yu Zhou1, Ziyu Wang1, Abdullah Rasmita1, Jianqun Yang2, Xingji Li3, Hans Jürgen von Bardeleben4, Weibo Gao5,6.
Abstract
Single-photon emitters (SPEs) play an important role in a number of quantum information tasks such as quantum key distributions. In these protocols, telecom wavelength photons are desired due to their low transmission loss in optical fibers. In this paper, we present a study of bright single-photon emitters in cubic silicon carbide (3C-SiC) emitting in the telecom range. We find that these emitters are photostable and bright at room temperature with a count rate of ~ MHz. Altogether with the fact that SiC is a growth and fabrication-friendly material, our result may be relevant for future applications in quantum communication technology.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30291249 PMCID: PMC6173757 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-06605-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 13C-SiC single-photon emitters. a 25 × 25 µm2 confocal can map of the SPEs found in 3C SiC epitaxy layer under 2 mW laser excitation. The scale bar is 5 µm. SPEs are marked with white circles. b Three representative RT PL spectrums of the SPEs. c Two representative PL spectrums of the SPEs at cryogenic temperature (5 K). d Second-order autocorrelation function of SPE 4 with g2(0) = 0.05 ± 0.03 under 0.2 mW continuous wave (CW) laser excitation. The black line is the raw data and red solid line is the fitting with Eq. (1). e Second-order autocorrelation function of SPE 4 with g2(0) = 0.13 ± 0.02 under pulsed laser excitation (50 µW)
Fig. 2Single-photon emitter characterization. a Lifetime measurement. The black curve is the raw data fitted with a single-exponential equation I(t)exp( − t/τ). From the fitting, τ = 0.81 ± 0.01 ns. b RT PL spectrum of the SPE 4. c Saturation behavior of the SPE 4 at different laser powers. The black curve is the raw data fitted with I(P) = Is/(1 + P0/P). d Fluorescence intensity trace at laser powers 1.5 mW (black) and 8.2 mW (blue) with a sampling time of 100 ms and duration 400 s at room temperature. No obvious blinking has been observed
Fig. 3Energy level analysis for SPEs. a Three-level model of the SPEs with ground state |1> , excited state |2> , and metastable state |3> . The parameter k12 is the excitation rate from ground state |1> to excited state |2> , and other k parameters represent the decay rate from state |i> to |j> , where i, j are number from 1 to 3. b Three representative CW second-order autocorrelation function measurements with different laser excitation powers. The red lines are the fitting using the Eq. (1). c, d, e The fitting parameters a, τ1 and τ2 of the antibunching curve as a function of excitation power. The red lines are the fitting of the data
Fig. 4Polarization of the SPEs. a, b The excitation (blue points) and emission (red points) polarization measurements from a SPE. Solid blue red lines are the fitting with I = a + bsin2(θ + ϕ). c Summary of 12 emitters’ emission axis orientation