Reducing phonon-induced decoherence in solid-state single-photon sources with cavity quantum electrodynamics
Abstract
Solid-state emitters are excellent candidates for developing integrated sources of single photons. Yet, phonons degrade the photon indistinguishability both through pure dephasing of the zero-phonon line and through phonon-assisted emission. Here, we study theoretically and experimentally the indistinguishability of photons emitted by a semiconductor quantum dot in a microcavity as a function of temperature. We show that a large coupling to a high quality factor cavity can simultaneously reduce the effect of both phonon-induced sources of decoherence. It first limits the effect of pure dephasing on the zero phonon line with indistinguishabilities above 97\% up to 18 K. Moreover, it efficiently redirects the phonon sidebands into the zero-phonon line and brings the indistinguishability of the full emission spectrum from 87\% (resp. 24\%) without cavity effect to more than 99\% (resp. 76\%) at 0 K (resp. 20 K). We provide guidelines for optimal cavity designs that further minimize the phonon-induced decoherence.
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