Physicists have spent more than a century measuring and making sense of the
strange ways that photons, electrons, and other subatomic particles interact at
extremely small scales. Engineers have spent decades figuring out how to take
advantage of these phenomena to create new technologies.
In one such phenomenon, called quantum entanglement, pairs of photons
become interconnected in such a way that the state of one photon instantly
changes to match the state of its paired photon, no matter how far apart they
are.
Nearly 80 years ago, Albert Einstein referred to this phenomenon as “spooky
action at a distance.” Today, entanglement is the subject of research programs
across the world — and it’s becoming a favored way to implement the most
fundamental form of quantum information, the qubit.
Currently, the
most efficient way to create photon pairs requires sending lightwaves through a
crystal large enough to see without a microscope. In a paper published today
in Nature Photonics, a team led by Columbia
Engineering researchers and collaborators, describe a new
method for creating these photon pairs that achieves higher performance on a
much smaller device using less energy. P. James Schuck, associate professor of mechanical
engineering at Columbia Engineering, helped lead the
research team.
These findings represent a significant step forward in the field of
nonlinear optics, which is concerned with using technologies to change the
properties of light for applications including lasers, telecommunications, and
laboratory equipment.
“This work represents the embodiment of the long-sought goal of bridging macroscopic and microscopic nonlinear and quantum optics,” says Schuck, who co-directs Columbia’s MS in Quantum Science and Technology. “It provides the foundation for scalable, highly efficient on-chip integrable devices such as tunable microscopic entangled-photon-pair generators.”
How it works
Measuring just 3.4 micrometers thick, the new device points to a future
where this important component of many quantum systems can fit onto a silicon
chip. This change would enable significant gains in the energy efficiency and
overall technical capabilities of quantum devices.
To create the device, the researchers used thin crystals of a so-called van
der Waals semiconducting transition metal called molybdenum disulfide. Then
they layered six of these crystal pieces into a stack, with each piece rotated
180 degrees relative to the crystal slabs above and below. As light travels
through this stack, a phenomenon called quasi-phase-matching manipulates
properties of the light, enabling the creation of paired photons.
This paper represents the first time that quasi-phase-matching in any van
der Waals material has been used to generate photon pairs at wavelengths that
are useful for telecommunications. The technique is significantly more
efficient than previous methods and far less prone to error.
“We believe this breakthrough will establish van der Waals materials as the
core of next-generation nonlinear and quantum photonic architectures, with them
being ideal candidates for enabling all future on-chip technologies and
replacing current bulk and periodically poled crystals,” Schuck says.
“These innovations will have an immediate impact in diverse areas including
satellite-based distribution and mobile phone quantum communication.”
How it happened
Schuck and his team built on their previous work to develop the new device.
In 2022, the group demonstrated that materials like molybdenum disulfide
possess useful properties for nonlinear optics — but performance was limited by
the tendency of light waves to interfere with one another while traveling
through this material.
The team turned to a technique called periodic poling to counteract this
problem, which is known as phase matching. By alternating the direction of the
slabs in the stack, the device manipulates light in a way that enables photon
pair generation at miniscule length scales.
“Once we understood how amazing this material was, we knew we had to pursue
the periodic poling, which could allow for the highly efficient generation of
photon pairs,” Schuck says.
Source: https://www.engineering.columbia.edu/about/news/engineering-quantum-entanglement-nanoscale
Journal article: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41566-024-01602-z
Source: Engineering Quantum Entanglement at the Nanoscale – Scents of Science
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