Telecom C-band single-photon sources with a semiconductor-dielectric microresonator

Abstract

Secure communications with quantum key distribution over fiber-optic links is one of the few recognized applications of quantum physics at the level of individual quanta -- single C-band photons. Currently, the widely used sources of such photons are highly attenuated laser pulses, featured by a low probability of single photon occurrence. Here, we present an efficient source with an InAs/GaAs quantum dot on a metamorphic buffer layer inside a micropillar-shaped microcavity. The key innovation is the use of different semiconductor and dielectric materials to form the lower (GaAs/AlGaAs) and upper (Si/SiO2) Bragg reflectors. Compatibility of these materials in a monolithic source is achieved by depositing a small amount of Si/SiO2 pairs on an incomplete micropillar made from a coherent heterostructure grown by molecular beam epitaxy. This design enables resonant excitation with π-pulses and generation of polarized photons with a record-breaking end-to-end efficiency of 11%.

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