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A solid-state single-photon filter

Abstract

A strong limitation of linear optical quantum computing is the probabilistic operation of two-quantum-bit gates based on the coalescence of indistinguishable photons. A route to deterministic operation is to exploit the single-photon nonlinearity of an atomic transition. Through engineering of the atom–photon interaction, phase shifters, photon filters and photon–photon gates have been demonstrated with natural atoms. Proofs of concept have been reported with semiconductor quantum dots, yet limited by inefficient atom–photon interfaces and dephasing. Here, we report a highly efficient single-photon filter based on a large optical nonlinearity at the single-photon level, in a near-optimal quantum-dot cavity interface. When probed with coherent light wavepackets, the device shows a record nonlinearity threshold around 0.3 ± 0.1 incident photons. We demonstrate that 80% of the directly reflected light intensity consists of a single-photon Fock state and that the two- and three-photon components are strongly suppressed compared with the single-photon one.

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Figure 1: Experimental design and characteristics of device 1.
Figure 2: Single photon nonlinearity and second-order correlation measurements.
Figure 3: Single-photon filtering.
Figure 4: Multi-photon state suppression.

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Acknowledgements

This work was partially supported by the ERC Starting Grant No. 277885 QD-CQED, the French Agence Nationale pour la Recherche (grant ANR SPIQE and USSEPP), the French RENATECH network, a public grant overseen by the French National Research Agency (ANR) as part of the ‘Investissements d'Avenir’ programme (Labex NanoSaclay, reference: ANR-10-LABX-0035), the ARC Centres for Engineered Quantum Systems (grant CE110001013), and Quantum Computation and Communication Technology (grant CE110001027), and the Asian Office of Aerospace Research and Development (grant FA2386-13-1-4070). C.A. acknowledges support from the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Individual Fellowship SQUAPH. A.G.W. acknowledges support from a University of Queensland Vice-Chancellor's Research and Teaching Fellowship.

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Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Contributions

The experiments were conducted by L.d.S with help from N.S., C.A. and G.C. and suggestions from A.G.W. Data analysis was done by L.d.S., C.A. and J.S. The cavity devices were fabricated by N.S. from samples grown by A.L. and C.G. Etching was done by I.S. The theory was developed by B.R. under the supervision of A.A. with help from L.L. All authors participated in scientific discussions and manuscript preparation. This project was supervised by L.L., A.A. and P.S.

Corresponding authors

Correspondence to Alexia Auffèves or Pascale Senellart.

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The authors declare no competing financial interests.

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De Santis, L., Antón, C., Reznychenko, B. et al. A solid-state single-photon filter. Nature Nanotech 12, 663–667 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1038/nnano.2017.85

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