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The Creation of Single Photon The Creation of Single Photon Sources Sources
By: Joseph Cosentino, Matthew Farkas, David Kim, Yuntao Ma, and
Chris Miller.
Quantum B TeamLab Instructor: Luke Bissell
Single photon sources have already been created and somewhat utilized but they are not very efficient.
Luke Bissell’s Phd research goals are to create more efficient single photon sources and to find sources that emit polarized photons.
The first method of obtaining single photon sources was to attenuate a laser to one photon.
This does not work, because in actuality, the laser is emitting an AVERAGE of one photon.
Sometimes the laser will emit two, or none at all. This method is not efficient.
Luke Bissell (our lab instructor) is searching for an efficient emitter of single photons and polarized single photons.
There are number of other theoretical methods that can be used to create single photons: Quantum Dots, Single Atoms, Single
Molecules, or Color centers in a diamond (nitrogen vacancy).
We used quantum dots, they are nanocrystals that are not difficult to create and manipulate. They are simply the most efficient method of
going about the research.
“Individual color centers in diamond are promising for near-term quantum technologies including quantum key distribution and metrology. Here we show fabrication of an as-yet uncharacterized nickel-related complex in diamond which has photophysical properties surpassing the two main-stay centers for single-photon applications, namely, the nitrogen-vacancy and the nickel-nitrogen complex (NE8) center. This center was fabricated using focused ion-beam implantation of nickel into isolated chemical vapor-deposited diamond crystals. A possible correlation of the center to a Ni/Si complex is substantiated by a coimplantation of Ni and Si into a pure bulk diamond. Room-temperature photoluminescence studies reveal a narrow emission in the near infrared region centered at 768 nm with a lifetime as short as 2 ns.”
Courtesy of: http://prb.aps.org/abstract/PRB/v79/i23/e235316
Quantum Dot’s are small crystalline structures (nanocrystals) that have the properties of single atoms of two energy levels.
Since they act as single atoms, they will emit a single photon when excited.
Isolating these nano-crystals is difficult.
NeV Single Photon
76 MHz repetition rate, ~6 ps pulsed-laser excitation at 532 nm
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CW excitation at 532 nm
Non-Antibunching
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Semiconductor nanocrystals that behave as 2 level atoms with size-dependent properties.
Electrons require a specific amount of energy to jump the bandgap.
Electrons emit a photon when they fall to lower energy levels.
Why can’t we attenuate a laser down to the single photon level?
The average number of photons emitted is 1.
The actual number is greater than 1 or is 0.
Do not get 1 photon at a time as in Quantum Dots.
L. J. Bissell, S. G. Lukishova, A. W. Schmid, et al., Chiral PhotonicBandgap Microcavities with Single Colloidal Semiconductor Quantum Dots," Proceedings of SPIE, Submitted.
The laser is a diode-pumped solid-state with 532-nm wavelength, 6 ps pulse duration and 76 MHz pulse repetition rate.
There are three major types of information that we gathered in this lab:• The intensity of an area of Quantum Dot
solution• The emitted photon counts of particular
Quantum Dots• And in the case of the CLC solutions the
wavelength spectrum of the emitted photons
We used a Labview application built by a former UR grad student Creates images of what the two APDs detect
on their imaging area using the images’ intensity data
Also used shows the intensity data of a particular point within the image over time. (histogram)
Used to determine the location of potential sites of individual Quantum Dots
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November 12th, 705nm Quantum Dots on glass, 20nM concentration (Histogram and Intensity Images)
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We used proprietary software called TimeHarp which is made specifically for counting individual photons The software essentially takes the same
information that is displayed in Labview and plots the number of counts based on the delay in time between the counts
Used to determine whether a given Quantum Dot is anti-bunched or not.
November 12th, 705nm Quantum Dots on glass, 20nM concentration (Count Plot)
We used some proprietary software called Andor Solis for Imaging: Gathered and displayed data collected by the
EM-CCD camera about a chosen quantum dot’s emission spectrum
Used in conjunction with a rotating polarizer to determine if the CLC containing the QD is polarizing the QD’s emissions (as is desired)
A sample with a linear polarizer rotated at 43 degrees in the imaging path
Same sample with a linear polarizer rotated at 135 degrees in the imaging path
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Polarizer at 43 degrees Polarizer at 135 degrees
That the spot in the sample tested is a quantum dot
That this particular quantum dot is a single, anti-bunched dot
And that the CLC is polarizing the light
Quantum Cryptography
Alice Bob
= 1 = 1
= 0 = 0
+ or xEve
N. Gisin, N. Gisin, et al., et al., Rev. Mod. Phys. Rev. Mod. Phys. 74,74, 145-195 (2002) 145-195 (2002)