Path to increasing the coincidence efficiency of integrated resonant photon sources

Silicon ring resonators are used as photon pair sources by taking advantage of silicon’s large third order nonlinearity with a process known as spontaneous four wave mixing. These sources are capable of producing pairs of indistinguishable photons but typically suffer from an effective 50% loss. By slightly decoupling the input waveguide from the ring, the desired photons generated in the ring can preferentially be directed to the drop port. Thus, the ratio between the coincidences from the drop port and the total number of coincidences from all ports (coincidence efficiency) can be significantly increased, with the trade-off being that the pump is less efficiently coupled into the ring. In this paper, ring resonators with this design have been demonstrated having coincidence efficiency of ∼ 96% but requiring a factor of ∼ 10 increase in the pump power. Through the modification of the coupling design that relies on additional spectral dependence, it is possible to achieve similar coincidence efficiencies without the increased pumping requirement. This can be achieved by coupling the input waveguide to the ring multiple times, thus creating a Mach-Zehnder interferometer. This coupler design can be used on both sides of the ring resonator so that resonances supported by one of the couplers are suppressed by the other. This is the ideal configuration for a photon-pair source as it can only support the pump photons at the input side while only allowing the generated photons to leave through the output side. This work realizes a device with preliminary results exhibiting the desired spectral dependence and with a coincidence efficiency as high as ∼ 97% while allowing the pump to be nearly critically coupled to the ring. The coincidence efficiency is measured to be near unity and reflects a significant reduction in the intrinsic losses typically associated with double bus resonators This device has the potential to greatly improve the scalability and performance of quantum computing and communication systems.

source: osapublishing.org / oe/abstract.cfm?uri=oe-25-26-33088

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