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UK funding (£1,220,021): Quantum Photonics for Scale Ukri1 Nov 2020 UK Research and Innovation, United Kingdom

Overview

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Quantum Photonics for Scale

Abstract Quantum information technology seeks to encode bits and bytes of information onto microscopic quantum systems. Governed by quantum mechanics, these systems can be in superposition, can interfere, and entangle, revolutionising devices which collect data, communicate, and compute. Future quantum sensors will measure with precision beyond the classical shot-noise limit; quantum transceivers will fundamentally guarantee security and detect eavesdroppers; and quantum computers, the most ambitious of quantum devices, will tremendously accelerate certain calculations. Photons, quanta of light, have several attractive properties: they travel, allowing information to move quickly within and between devices; they are low noise, crucial for low error rates; and they are the quantum system for which, through 1000 years of optics, we have developed the best intuition and the most mature technology. Despite this, optical elements-lenses, mirrors, shutters, beamsplitters, crystals-perform too poorly, and are too bulky and manual, for example, to put quantum sensors in a smartphone, or to build quantum computers with millions of elements. Photon-photon interactions naturally depend on chance, but new ideas suggest clever control systems can inject certainty. Crucially required are: optical switches, electronics, and single-photon detectors. For success, all these elements must be integrated and delivered at scale. Scalability-the ability to increase complexity without limit-is what photonics has so far lacked, in both size and performance. To achieve large-scale quantum computation with photons or the large-scale deployment of devices for optical quantum sensing and communication-to make quantum photonics useful-it must scale up. This programme will critically re-engineer quantum photonics for scale. It will build a platform from which fantastic quantum devices can be launched, and it will launch them. Silicon electronics is now ubiquitous, with high performance and extreme complexity. Silicon photonics has followed on its coat-tails, with microscopic optical elements, huge wafers, global manufacturing, and unrivalled know-how. In recent years, silicon photonics has grown into a huge research activity and a multi-billion-pound industry. This has propelled compact silicon quantum photonics, pioneered by the fellow, into unprecedented quantum complexity and functionality. In quantum optics, to lose a single photon is to lose irreplaceable quantum information. Silicon photonics is compact, but far too lossy: surface roughness and two-photon absorption are the main culprits. Light with long wavelengths, in the mid-infrared, however, can dodge both mechanisms, and pass with very little loss. In silicon, long-wavelength light is also more nonlinear, and optics for it are easier to make. This fellowship will combine the compactness and performance of silicon electronics and silicon quantum photonics to achieve high complexity and manufacturability, with performance enhanced by mid-infrared quantum optics and new technologies. By cleverly integrating very cold single-photon detectors (and so making the electronics and photonics very cold too) a quantum photonics platform for scale will be built. The fellow and his team, with help from collaborators, will pursue five objectives towards this aim: (1) to develop an ultra-low-loss chip optics platform based on mid-infrared silicon photonics, with low-loss fibre-chip couplers and delay lines; (2) to develop an ultra-fast, low-temperature, silicon-based electronic controller to dispense with chance; (3) to develop suitable fast and low-power electronic-to-optical interfaces; (4) to develop the infrastructure to do this at low temperatures; and (5) to launch fantastic quantum devices from the assembled platform.
Category Fellowship
Reference MR/T041773/1
Status Closed
Funded period start 01/11/2020
Funded period end 31/10/2024
Funded value £1,220,021.00
Source https://gtr.ukri.org/projects?ref=MR%2FT041773%2F1

Participating Organisations

University of Bristol
NTT Basic Research Laboratories
Waseda University
University of Southampton
Photon Spot
Waseda University
University of Glasgow

The filing refers to a past date, and does not necessarily reflect the current state. The current state is available on the following page: University of Bristol, Bristol.

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