Fiber-coupled single-photon detectors based on NbN superconducting nanostructures for practical quantum cryptography and photon-correlation studies

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Abstract

We have fabricated and tested a two-channel single-photon detector system based on two fiber-coupled superconducting single-photon detectors (SSPDs). Our best device reached the system quantum efficiency of 0.3% in the 1540-nm telecommunication wavelength with a fiber-to-detector coupling factor of about 30%. The photoresponse consisted of 2.5-ns-wide voltage pulses with a rise time of 250 ps and timing jitter below 40 ps. The overall system response time, measured as a second-order, photon cross-correlation function, was below 400 ps. Our SSPDs operate at 4.2 K inside a liquid-helium Dewar, but their optical fiber inputs and electrical outputs are at room tmperature. Our two-channel detector system should find applications in practical quantum cryptography and in antibunching-type quantum correlation measurements. © 2005 American Institute of Physics.

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Słysz, W., Wȩgrzecki, M., Bar, J., Grabiec, P., Górska, M., Zwiller, V., … Sobolewski, R. (2006). Fiber-coupled single-photon detectors based on NbN superconducting nanostructures for practical quantum cryptography and photon-correlation studies. Applied Physics Letters, 88(26). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.2218105

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