Characterization of Group-IV Color Center Hyperfine Coupling for Brokered Entanglement Protocols

ORAL

Abstract

A quantum register coupled to a spin-photon interface is a key component in brokered entanglement protocols for quantum communication and information processing. Group-IV color centers in diamond (SiV, GeV, and SnV) are promising candidates for this application, comprising an electronic spin with optical transitions acting as a spin-photon interface. However, the use of the intrinsic group-IV nuclear spin as a quantum register for brokered entanglement remains an outstanding challenge, particularly for the heavier elements, GeV and SnV, whose hyperfine features have not been extensively studied. Here, we present first-principles and experimental results characterising the hyperfine properties of the group-IV color centers. We show that the SnV has an optically resolvable hyperfine structure due to electron-nuclear coupling which is an order of magnitude larger than the lifetime-limited linewidth of the optical transition. We discuss how this structure changes under bias conditions, and how the hyperfine levels can be used in brokered entanglement protocols.

Publication: Hyperfine Spectroscopy of Isotopically Engineered Group-IV Color Centers in Diamond, I. Harris et al., Physical Review X Quantum 4 (040301)

Presenters

  • Isaac Harris

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT

Authors

  • Isaac Harris

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT

  • Cathryn Michaels

    Univ of Cambridge

  • Kevin Chen

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology, HRL Laboratories

  • Ryan A Parker

    University of Cambridge

  • Michael Titze

    Sandia National Laboratories

  • Jesus Arjona Martinez

    University of Cambridge

  • Madison Sutula

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Ian Christen

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Alexander M Stramma

    University of Cambridge, Univ of Cambridge

  • William G Roth

    University of Cambridge

  • Carola M Purser

    University of Cambridge

  • Martin Hayhurst Appel

    University of Cambridge, Univ. of Cambridge

  • Chao Li

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Matthew Trusheim

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard University

  • Nicola Palmer

    Element Six

  • Matthew L Markham

    Element Six

  • Edward S Bielejec

    Sandia National Laboratories

  • Mete Atatüre

    Univ of Cambridge, University of Cambridge

  • Dirk Englund

    MIT, Massachusetts Institute of Technology