Bright and pure single-photon source in a silicon chip by nanoscale positioning of a color center in a microcavity

Abstract

We present an all-silicon source of near-infrared linearly-polarized single photons, fabricated by nanoscale positioning of a color center in a silicon-on-insulator microcavity. The color center consists of a single W center, created at a well-defined position by Si+ ion implantation through a 150 nm-diameter nanohole in a mask. A circular Bragg grating cavity resonant with the W's zero-phonon line at 1217 nm is fabricated at the same location as the nanohole. By Purcell enhancement of zero-phonon emission, we obtain a photon count rate of 1.29 0.01 Mcounts/s at saturation under above-gap continuous-wave excitation with a Debye-Waller factor of 98.61.4 \%. A clean photon antibunching behavior is observed up to pump powers ensuring saturation of the W's emission (g(2)(0)=0.060.02 at P=9.2Psat), evidencing that the density of additional parasitic fluorescent defects is very low. We also demonstrate the triggered emission of single photons with 932 \% purity under weak pulsed laser excitation. At high pulsed laser power, we reveal a detrimental effect of repumping processes, that could be mitigated using selective pumping schemes in the future. These results represent a major step towards on-demand sources of indistinguishable near-infrared single photons within silicon photonics chips.

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