LD

L. De Santis

16 records found

Colour centres in diamond have emerged as a leading solid-state platform for advancing quantum technologies, satisfying the DiVincenzo criteria1 and recently achieving quantum advantage in secret key distribution2. Blueprint studies3–5 indicate th ...
We show enhanced single-photon emission from artificial atoms in silicon by coupling them to cavities with high quality factors and small mode volumes, thus enabling enhanced light-matter interactions which are crucial for quantum technologies.@en
Diamond tin-vacancy centers have emerged as a promising platform for quantum information science and technology. A key challenge for their use in more-complex quantum experiments and scalable applications is the ability to prepare the center in the desired charge state with the o ...
We demonstrate heralded initialization of charge state and optical transition frequency of diamond tin-vacancy centers, using (off-)resonant lasers, photon detection and real-time logic. Using this, we show frequency tunability > 100 MHz and strongly improved optical coherence ...
Color centers integrated with nanophotonic devices have emerged as a compelling platform for quantum science and technology. Here, we integrate tin-vacancy centers in a diamond waveguide and investigate the interaction with light at the single-photon level in both reflection and ...
We introduce a quantum system-on-chip (QSoC) architecture based on (I) a co-designed diamond quantum memory array, (II) a custom CMOS backplane, and (III) a protocol for fully connected cluster state generation.@en
Artificial atoms in solids are leading candidates for quantum networks, scalable quantum computing, and sensing, as they combine long-lived spins with mobile photonic qubits. Recently, silicon has emerged as a promising host material where artificial atoms with long spin coherenc ...
We present our optimized diamond fabrication process based on quasi-isotropic crystal-plane-dependent reactive-ion-etching at low and high temperature plasma regime. We demonstrate successful integration of SnV centers in diamond waveguides showing quantum non-linear effects. We ...
A central goal for quantum technologies is to develop platforms for precise and scalable control of individually addressable artificial atoms with efficient optical interfaces. Color centers in silicon, such as the recently-isolated carbon-related G-center, exhibit emission direc ...
Group-IV colour centres in diamond are a promising light-matter interface for quantum networking devices. We demonstrate multiaxis coherent control of the SnV spin-qubit via an all-optical stimulated Raman drive between the ground and excited states.@en
We demonstrate silicon color centers coupled to foundry-compatible silicon waveguides. We produced G-centers via carbon implantation in commercial silicon-on-insulator waveguides and measure through-waveguide single-photon emission in the telecommunications O-band.@en
Optical quantum technologies require strong light-matter interaction. We couple silicon color center ensembles to high-Q/V cavities and show enhanced emission in the telecommunications O-band.@en
We fabricate single tin-vacancy centres in diamond, we perform spectroscopy and coherent population trapping to verify optical driving of the spin states. We investigate the integration in diamond waveguides to realise an efficient spin-photon interface.@en
Group-IV color centers in diamond are a promising light-matter interface for quantum networking devices. The negatively charged tin-vacancy center (SnV) is particularly interesting, as its large spin-orbit coupling offers strong protection against phonon dephasing and robust cycl ...
Quantum emitters in diamond are leading optically accessible solid-state qubits. Among these, Group IV-vacancy defect centers have attracted great interest as coherent and stable optical interfaces to long-lived spin states. Theory indicates that their inversion symmetry provides ...