Silicon carbide has recently been developed as a platform for optically addressable spin defects. In particular, the neutral divacancy in the 4H polytype displays an optically addressable spin-1 ground state and near-infrared optical emission. Here, we present the Purcell enhancement of a single neutral divacancy coupled to a photonic crystal cavity. We utilize a combination of nanolithographic techniques and a dopant-selective photoelectrochemical etch to produce suspended cavities with quality factors exceeding 5000. Subsequent coupling to a single divacancy leads to a Purcell factor of ∼50, which manifests as increased photoluminescence into the zero-phonon line and a shortened excited-state lifetime. Additionally, we measure coherent co...
Defect based qubit systems like the nitrogen vacancy center in diamond have recently emerged as prom...
Silicon T centers present the promising possibility to generate optically active spin qubits in an a...
The divacancies in Silicon Carbide are a family of paramagnetic defects that show promise for quantu...
The emergence of controllable quantum systems has led to exciting applications for quantum computati...
The identification of new solid-state defect-qubit candidates in widely used semiconductors has the ...
This thesis investigates the development of quantum technologies with spins in silicon carbide (SiC)...
Development of quantum devices with indistinguishable photon generation and spin-based quantum infor...
Interfacing solid-state defect electron spins to other quantum systems is an ongoing challenge. The ...
Scalable quantum networking requires quantum systems with quantum processing capabilities. Solid sta...
Color centers in wide-bandgap semiconductors are attractive systems for quantum technologies since t...
Divacancy defects in silicon carbide have long-lived electronic spin states and sharp optical transi...
Selectively interfacing solid-state defect electron spins to desired control mechanisms and quantum ...
Distributing entanglement in a quantum network requires a combination of high-quality photonic inter...
Silicon carbide (SiC) has recently been investigated as an alternative material to host deep optical...
Various defect centers have displayed promise as either quantum applications, single photon emitters...
Defect based qubit systems like the nitrogen vacancy center in diamond have recently emerged as prom...
Silicon T centers present the promising possibility to generate optically active spin qubits in an a...
The divacancies in Silicon Carbide are a family of paramagnetic defects that show promise for quantu...
The emergence of controllable quantum systems has led to exciting applications for quantum computati...
The identification of new solid-state defect-qubit candidates in widely used semiconductors has the ...
This thesis investigates the development of quantum technologies with spins in silicon carbide (SiC)...
Development of quantum devices with indistinguishable photon generation and spin-based quantum infor...
Interfacing solid-state defect electron spins to other quantum systems is an ongoing challenge. The ...
Scalable quantum networking requires quantum systems with quantum processing capabilities. Solid sta...
Color centers in wide-bandgap semiconductors are attractive systems for quantum technologies since t...
Divacancy defects in silicon carbide have long-lived electronic spin states and sharp optical transi...
Selectively interfacing solid-state defect electron spins to desired control mechanisms and quantum ...
Distributing entanglement in a quantum network requires a combination of high-quality photonic inter...
Silicon carbide (SiC) has recently been investigated as an alternative material to host deep optical...
Various defect centers have displayed promise as either quantum applications, single photon emitters...
Defect based qubit systems like the nitrogen vacancy center in diamond have recently emerged as prom...
Silicon T centers present the promising possibility to generate optically active spin qubits in an a...
The divacancies in Silicon Carbide are a family of paramagnetic defects that show promise for quantu...