Waveguide integrated superconducting single-photon detectors implemented as near-perfect absorbers of coherent radiation

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Abstract

At the core of an ideal single-photon detector is an active material that absorbs and converts every incident photon to a discriminable signal. A large active material favours efficient absorption, but often at the expense of conversion efficiency, noise, speed and timing accuracy. In this work, short (8.5 μm long) and narrow (8 × 35 nm2) U-shaped NbTiN nanowires atop silicon-on-insulator waveguides are embedded in asymmetric nanobeam cavities that render them as near-perfect absorbers despite their small volume. At 2.05 K, when biased at 0.9 of the critical current, the resulting superconducting single-photon detectors achieve a near-unity on-chip quantum efficiency for ∼1,545 nm photons, an intrinsic dark count rate <0.1 Hz, a reset time of ∼7 ns, and a timing jitter of ∼55 ps full-width at half-maximum. Such ultracompact, high-performance detectors are essential for progress in integrated quantum optics.

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Akhlaghi, M. K., Schelew, E., & Young, J. F. (2015). Waveguide integrated superconducting single-photon detectors implemented as near-perfect absorbers of coherent radiation. Nature Communications, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms9233

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