Hybrid quantum photonics based on artificial atoms placed inside one hole of a photonic crystal cavity
Konstantin G. Fehler, Lukas Antoniuk, Niklas Lettner, Anna P. Ovvyan,, Richard Waltrich, Nico Gruhler, Valery A. Davydov, Viatcheslav N. Agafonov,, Wolfram H. P. Pernice, Alexander Kubanek

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a hybrid quantum photonics system where silicon-vacancy centers in nanodiamonds are integrated into photonic crystal cavities, significantly enhancing photon flux and bandwidth for quantum network applications.
Contribution
It introduces a deterministic placement method of SiV$^-$ centers in photonic crystal cavities, achieving over 14-fold photon flux enhancement and GHz operation bandwidth.
Findings
Photon flux increased by over 14 times
Photon lifetime shortened to below 460 ps
Potential for GHz operation bandwidth
Abstract
Spin-based quantum photonics promise to realize distributed quantum computing and quantum networks. The performance depends on efficient entanglement distribution, where the efficiency can be boosted by means of cavity quantum electrodynamics. The central challenge is the development of compact devices with large spin-photon coupling rates and high operation bandwidth. Photonic crystal cavities comprise strong field confinement but put high demands on accurate positioning of an atomic system in the mode field maximum. Color center in diamond, and in particular the negatively-charged Silicon-Vacancy center, emerged as a promising atom-like systems. Large spectral stability and access to long-lived, nuclear spin memories enabled elementary demonstrations of quantum network nodes including memory-enhanced quantum communication. In a hybrid approach, we deterministically place…
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