Microwave-to-optical conversion with a gallium phosphide photonic crystal cavity

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Abstract

Electrically actuated optomechanical resonators provide a route to quantum-coherent, bidirectional conversion of microwave and optical photons. Such devices could enable optical interconnection of quantum computers based on qubits operating at microwave frequencies. Here we present a platform for microwave-to-optical conversion comprising a photonic crystal cavity made of single-crystal, piezoelectric gallium phosphide integrated on pre-fabricated niobium circuits on an intrinsic silicon substrate. The devices exploit spatially extended, sideband-resolved mechanical breathing modes at ~3.2 GHz, with vacuum optomechanical coupling rates of up to g0/2π ≈ 300 kHz. The mechanical modes are driven by integrated microwave electrodes via the inverse piezoelectric effect. We estimate that the system could achieve an electromechanical coupling rate to a superconducting transmon qubit of ~200 kHz. Our work represents a decisive step towards integration of piezoelectro-optomechanical interfaces with superconducting quantum processors.

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Hönl, S., Popoff, Y., Caimi, D., Beccari, A., Kippenberg, T. J., & Seidler, P. (2022). Microwave-to-optical conversion with a gallium phosphide photonic crystal cavity. Nature Communications, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-28670-5

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