Design of a release-free piezo-optomechanical quantum transducer

ORAL

Abstract

Quantum transduction between microwave and optical photons offers the potential to merge the long-range connectivity of optical photons with the deterministic quantum operations of superconducting microwave qubits. A promising approach to achieving this uses an intermediary mechanical mode along with piezo-optomechanical interactions. Traditionally, these transducers are suspended to confine mechanical fields, but this complicates manufacturing and comes with the major challenge of poor thermal anchoring and a trade-off between noise and efficiency. To overcome these issues, we introduce the -- to the best of our knowledge -- first release-free piezo-optomechanical quantum transducer architecture. Our release-free, i.e. non-suspended, design leverages a silicon-on-sapphire (SOS) platform. It combines release-free lithium niobate electromechanical crystals with silicon optomechanical crystals on a sapphire substrate, optimizing thermal anchoring and microwave and mechanical coherence. Despite departing from the traditional suspended transducer paradigm, our release-free design achieves coupling rates sufficient for quantum-level interactions between microwave photons, phonons, and optical photons. Unconventionally, it utilizes high-wavevector mechanical modes tightly confined to the chip surface. Beyond quantum science and engineering, this platform and its design principles could also propel low-power acousto-optic systems in integrated photonics.

*We acknowledge support from the Knut and Alice Wallenberg foundation through the Wallenberg Centre for Quantum Technology (WACQT), from the European Research Council via Starting Grant 948265, and from the Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research via grant FFL21-0039.

Publication: P. Burger, J. Frey, J. Kolvik, D. Hambraeus, and R. Van Laer, "Design of a release-free piezo-optomechanical quantum transducer" (2024), arXiv:2408.15134 [quant-ph]

Presenters

  • Paul Burger

    • Chalmers Univ of Technology

Authors

  • Paul Burger

    • Chalmers Univ of Technology
  • Joey Frey

    • Chalmers Univ of Tech
  • Johan Olov Kolvik

    • Chalmers Univ of Tech
  • David Hambraeus

    • Chalmers University of Technology
  • Raphael Van Laer

    • Chalmers University of Technology