Scalable Feedback Stabilization of Quantum Light Sources on a CMOS Chip
Danielius Kramnik, Imbert Wang, Anirudh Ramesh, Josep M. Fargas, Cabanillas, {\DH}or{\dj}e Gluhovi\'c, Sidney Buchbinder, Panagiotis Zarkos,, Christos Adamopoulos, Prem Kumar, Vladimir M. Stojanovi\'c, Milo\v{s} A., Popovi\'c

TL;DR
This paper presents a CMOS-chip integrated quantum light source stabilization system using on-chip feedback, enabling scalable, stable quantum photonic circuits with high pair generation efficiency and robustness against temperature variations.
Contribution
First demonstration of an electronic-photonic quantum system-on-chip with on-chip feedback control for quantum light sources in CMOS technology.
Findings
Achieved high CAR of 134 and low g(2)(0) of 0.021 at 2.2 kHz pair rate.
Maintained stable quantum properties despite temperature variations.
Operated reliably with dense device integration on a CMOS chip.
Abstract
Silicon photonics is a leading platform for realizing the vast numbers of physical qubits needed for useful quantum information processing because it leverages mature complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) manufacturing to integrate on-chip thousands of optical devices for generating and manipulating quantum states of light. A challenge to the practical operation and scale-up of silicon quantum-photonic integrated circuits, however, is the need to control their extreme sensitivity to process and temperature variations, free-carrier and self-heating nonlinearities, and thermal crosstalk. To date these challenges have been partially addressed using bulky off-chip electronics, sacrificing many benefits of a chip-scale platform. Here, we demonstrate the first electronic-photonic quantum system-on-chip (EPQSoC) consisting of quantum-correlated photon-pair sources stabilized via…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum optics and atomic interactions · Photonic and Optical Devices · Neural Networks and Reservoir Computing
