Engineering Er3+ placement and emission through chemically-synthesized self-aligned SiC:Ox nanowire photonic crystal structures
Natasha Tabassum, Vasileios Nikas, Brian Ford, Edward Crawford, Spyros, Gallis

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel synthesis method for silicon carbide nanowire photonic crystal structures doped with erbium, enabling enhanced and controllable Er3+ emission at telecom wavelengths for quantum technology applications.
Contribution
It introduces a self-aligned chemical vapor deposition process for creating ultrathin SiC nanowire photonic crystals with precise Er3+ placement and emission engineering capabilities.
Findings
Up to 60-fold increase in Er3+ photoluminescence emission.
Up to 30-fold enhancement in Er3+ lifetime.
Emission at 1538 nm modulated by photonic crystal lattice periodicity.
Abstract
High precision placement and integration of color centers in a silicon-based nanosystem, such as a nanowire (NW) array, exhibiting high integration functionality and high photoluminescence (PL) yield can serve as a critical building block towards the practical realization of devices in the emerging field of quantum technologies. Herein, we report on an innovative synthesis route for realizing ultrathin silicon carbide (SiC) NW arrays doped with and without oxygen (SiC:Ox), and also erbium (Er). The arrays of the deterministically positioned NWs are grown in a self-aligned manner through chemical-vapor-deposition (CVD). A key enabler of this synthesis route is that SiC:Ox NW photonic crystal (PC) nanostructures are engineered with tailored geometry in precise locations during nanofabrication. These ultrathin NW PC structures not only facilitate the on-demand positioning of Er3+ ions but…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSilicon Nanostructures and Photoluminescence · Ga2O3 and related materials · Photonic Crystals and Applications
