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Related Concept Videos

Fast Reactions01:27

Fast Reactions

Fast reactions occurring in times shorter than the time needed to mix reactants pose a unique challenge for investigation. In a liquid-phase continuous-flow system, reactants A and B are swiftly pushed into the mixing chamber, where mixing occurs within 1 ms. The reaction mixture then flows through an observation tube, and one measures light absorption to determine species concentrations at various points of the tube. This method is most appropriate when relatively large volumes of reactants...

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Solution-Processed Ultrafast, Room-Temperature Single-Photon Source at 1550 nm.

Siyuan Zhang1, Andrew J Traverso2, Ekaterina A Dolgopolova3

  • 1Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27705, United States.

ACS Nano
|May 13, 2025
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Researchers developed a room-temperature single photon source for quantum technologies. This bright, stable source emits 12 million photons per second at 1550 nm, overcoming previous limitations in speed and stability.

Keywords:
colloidalnanocavityplasmonicsquantum dotssingle photons

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Area of Science:

  • Quantum optics and photonics
  • Materials science for quantum applications
  • Nanotechnology for quantum information

Background:

  • Single photon sources are crucial for quantum technologies but face challenges with speed, brightness, and stability in the telecom band.
  • Existing telecom photon sources often require cryogenic cooling or suffer from long radiative lifetimes and material instability.
  • The demand for ultrafast, bright, and stable room-temperature single photon sources operating at telecom wavelengths (∼1550 nm) remains a significant challenge.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To develop an ultrafast, bright, and stable single photon source operating at room temperature in the telecom band.
  • To overcome the limitations of long radiative lifetimes and cryogenic requirements in existing telecom photon sources.
  • To create a solution-processable and lithography-free single photon source leveraging colloidal fabrication.

Main Methods:

  • Embedding stable colloidal PbS/CdS quantum dots in a solution-synthesized nanoparticle-on-mirror cavity.
  • Utilizing nanoparticle-on-mirror cavities to enhance light-matter interactions and control quantum dot emission.
  • Characterizing single quantum dot emission properties, including Purcell factors and radiative lifetimes.

Main Results:

  • Achieved extreme Purcell factors up to 10,700 in single cavity-coupled quantum dots.
  • Demonstrated ultrafast emission lifetimes as short as 65 picoseconds.
  • Observed near-complete suppression of blinking in the quantum dot emitters.
  • Reported a single photon source emitting 12 million photons per second at 1550 nm, exceeding previous room-temperature brightness by over two orders of magnitude.

Conclusions:

  • Developed a novel room-temperature single photon source in the telecom band with unprecedented brightness and speed.
  • The solution-processable and lithography-free nature of these sources facilitates integration with existing fabrication technologies.
  • These advanced single photon sources hold significant promise for advancing quantum communication, computing, and sensing applications.