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High-yield fabrication of entangled photon emitters for hybrid quantum networking using high-temperature droplet epitaxy

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arxiv 1710.03483 v2 pith:NPN3L5XE submitted 2017-10-10 cond-mat.mes-hall quant-ph

High-yield fabrication of entangled photon emitters for hybrid quantum networking using high-temperature droplet epitaxy

classification cond-mat.mes-hall quant-ph
keywords quantumdropletentangledepitaxyphotondotsemissionemitters
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Several semiconductor quantum dot techniques have been investigated for the generation of entangled photon pairs. Among the other techniques, droplet epitaxy enables the control of the shape, size, density, and emission wavelength of the quantum emitters. However, the fraction of the entanglement-ready quantum dots that can be fabricated with this method is still limited to around 5%, and matching the energy of the entangled photons to atomic transitions (a promising route towards quantum networking) remains an outstanding challenge. Here, we overcome these obstacles by introducing a modified approach to droplet epitaxy on a high symmetry (111)A substrate, where the fundamental crystallization step is performed at a significantly higher temperature as compared to previous reports. Our method drastically improves the yield of entanglement-ready photon sources near the emission wavelength of interest, which can be as high as 95% due to the low values of fine structure splitting and radiative lifetime, together with the reduced exciton dephasing offered by the choice of GaAs/AlGaAs materials. The quantum dots are designed to emit in the operating spectral region of Rb-based slow-light media, providing a viable technology for quantum repeater stations.

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