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Quantum Light from Diamond and Plastic

Novel hybrid approach combining two completely different material systems

Researchers from Humboldt-Universitaet zu Berlin and Karlsruhe Institute for Technology (KIT) have developed a simple method to fabricate stable sources of single light quanta. The approach published in the Open Access Journal Scientific Reports of Nature Publishing Group is based on a novel hybrid approach combining two completely different material systems.

On the one side, there are tiny fragments of diamond. Besides carbon diamond contains other atoms as natural impurities. These impurity atoms or so-called colour centres are responsible for the yellow or blue colours of natural diamond. Due to their very small size of only a few millionths of a millimetre, some of the diamond fragments contained only a single colour centre, which could be excited optically with the help of laser light. The colour centre releases its energy by emission of single quanta of light, or photons, which are thus generated in a controlled way one-by-one.

(a) Sketch of the direct laser writing process. A femtosecond laser beam is focussed into the photoresist in order to polymerize well defined 3D structures. (b) Scanning electron micrograph of such a structure after development containing several key photonic elements, such as waveguides, couplers and microdisc resonators. Scale bar is 5 μm. Figure: Oliver Benson
(a) Sketch of the direct laser writing process. A femtosecond laser
beam is focussed into the photoresist in order to polymerize well
defined 3D structures.
(b) Scanning electron micrograph of such a structure after
development containing several key photonic elements, such as
waveguides, couplers and microdisc resonators. Scale bar is 5 μm.
Figure: Oliver Benson

The researchers now mixed the diamond fragments with a special photo resist. A focussed laser beam irradiating the resist layer induced local polymerisation, i.e. the resist was turned into plastic. In this way it was possible to write nearly arbitrary three-dimensional structures, which contain single diamond fragments with single colour centres. The research team at first fabricated optical waveguides and resonators for efficient collection and routing of the photons emitted from the colour centres.

A major advantage of the new hybrid material system is on the one hand the well-established and cost efficient fabrication method and on the other hand the unlimited stability of operation even at room temperature. The next steps are now to combine the novel structures with other optical instrumentation. The researchers expect that in this way numerous applications in the fields of high-resolution microscopy, optical sensing, or quantum information processing can be realized in a reliable and cost-efficient approach.

Further Information

A. W. Schell, J. Kaschke, J. Fischer, R. Henze, J. Wolters, M. Wegener, O. Benson, Scientific Reports 3:1577, 1-5 (2013)

Contact

Prof. Dr. Oliver Benson
Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
Department of Physics
oliver.benson@physik.hu-berlin.de