Abstract

Quantum photonic integrated circuits, composed of linear-optical elements, offer an efficient way for encoding and processing quantum information on-chip. At their core, these circuits rely on reconfigurable phase shifters, typically constructed from classical components such as thermo- or electro-optical materials, while quantum solid-state emitters such as quantum dots are limited to acting as single-photon sources. Here, we demonstrate the potential of quantum dots as reconfigurable phase shifters. We use numerical models based on established literature parameters to show that circuits utilizing these emitters enable high-fidelity operation and are scalable. Despite the inherent imperfections associated with quantum dots, such as imperfect coupling, dephasing, or spectral diffusion, we show that circuits based on these emitters may be optimized such that these do not significantly impact the unitary infidelity. Specifically, they do not increase the infidelity by more than 0.001 in circuits with up to 10 modes, compared to those affected only by standard nanophotonic losses and routing errors. For example, we achieve fidelities of 0.9998 in quantum-dot-based circuits enacting controlled-phase and – not gates without any redundancies. These findings demonstrate the feasibility of quantum emitter-driven quantum information processing and pave the way for cryogenically-compatible, fast, and low-loss reconfigurable quantum photonic circuits.

Details

Title
Reconfigurable quantum photonic circuits based on quantum dots
Author
McCaw, Adam 1 ; Ewaniuk, Jacob 1 ; Shastri, Bhavin J 2 ; Rotenberg, Nir 1 

 Centre for Nanophotonics, Department of Physics, Engineering Physics & Astronomy, Queen’s University, 64 Bader Lane, K7L 3N6, Kingston, Ontario, Canada 
 Centre for Nanophotonics, Department of Physics, Engineering Physics & Astronomy, Queen’s University, 64 Bader Lane, K7L 3N6, Kingston, Ontario, Canada; Vector Institute, M5G 1M1, Toronto, Ontario, Canada 
Pages
2951-2959
Publication year
2024
Publication date
2024
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
ISSN
21928606
e-ISSN
21928614
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
3079227869
Copyright
© 2024. This work is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.