| Literature DB >> 35277471 |
Di Zhang1, Yang Chen2,3, Shengchao Gong1, Wei Wu1, Wei Cai1, Mengxin Ren4,5, Xifeng Ren6,7, Shuang Zhang8, Guangcan Guo2,3, Jingjun Xu9.
Abstract
Metasurfaces have proven themselves an exotic ability to harness light at nano-scale, being important not only for classical but also for quantum optics. Dynamic manipulation of the quantum states is at the heart of quantum information processing; however, such function has been rarely realized with metasurfaces so far. Here, we report an all-optical dynamic modulation of the photonic quantum states using the nonlinear metasurface. The metasurface consists of a metallic nanostructure combined with a photoisomerizable azo layer. By tuning the plasmonic resonance through optically switching the azo molecules between their binary isomeric states, we have realized dynamic control of transmission efficiencies of orthogonally polarized photons and also the phase delay between them, thereby an entangled state was efficiently controlled. As an illustration, a quantum state distillation has been demonstrated to recover a Bell state from a non-maximally entangled one to that with fidelities higher than 98%. Our work would enrich the functions of the metasurface in the quantum world, from static to dynamic modulation, making the quantum metasurface going practical.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35277471 PMCID: PMC8917209 DOI: 10.1038/s41377-022-00744-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Light Sci Appl ISSN: 2047-7538 Impact factor: 17.782
Fig. 1Dynamic control of entangled quantum states using a nonlinear metasurface.
a The polarization-entangled two-qubit state is described by . The metasurface is acting on only one of the photons. The nonlinear modulation of the quantum state is accomplished by external control light with power (green beam). is not maximally entangled when . The state distillation corresponds to the case of recovering to 1. b Schematic of a single unit cell. Gold film with 45 nm thickness was sputtered onto a fused silica substrate. An array of anisotropic structured ASRs was patterned by FIB milling. A nonlinear switching layer of ethyl red polymer film was spin-coated on top. The designed geometric parameters are the period , the slit length , the slit width , and the gap between “C” arm and “I” slit . Representative SEM image of the sample is given in bottom panel. Vertical (V) and horizontal (H) directions are defined as along y- and x-axes, respectively. c The ethyl red molecule isomerizes from trans state to cis state by green-light irradiation, and then recovers to the original state through thermal relaxation in dark. Such reversible structural transformation would change the optical response of the metasurface, hence the value of
Fig. 2Nonlinear tuning of the optical response of metasurface.
a Numerically simulated transmission T for V- and H-polarizations are given by red and blue lines, respectively. The anisotropic response is further characterized by the transmission ratio (, the vertical coordinate is in log scale) and the relative transmittance phase difference ϕ between the orthogonal polarizations. Solid lines present results for metasurface without control light, and dashed lines are those under the control light. b Experimental results of T, , and ϕ. The wavelength of photonic quanta is 808 nm, which is represented by vertical black dashed lines
Fig. 3Dynamic control of quantum states.
a Experimental setup for dynamic quantum state control. BBO: β-barium borate crystals; QC: quartz crystal; QWP: quarter-waveplate; HWP: half-waveplate; BS: beam splitter; PBS: polarized beam splitter; IF: interference filter; SMF: single-mode fiber. b The density matrix ρ of the initial state. The system has been biased to generate a non-maximally entangled state. The real part of ρ is given in the left column, and the imaginary part is shown on right. c The density matrix ρ of the distilled state after applying 14 mW control light. The initial state is redrawn here by dashed lines for a clear comparison. d The evolution of the quantum state as a function of the control light power (). Concurrence (top), fidelity (middle), and three characteristic elements of the density matrix (bottom) show the monotonic relationship with the power of the control light. Dots are experimental results, and lines are eye-guides