Quantum Transducer

Stanford University and SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory scientists have developed a device that converts mm-wave signals to optical frequencies, advancing quantum communications and next-generation computing. Nature Communications reported a triply-resonant integrated superconducting electro-optic transducer. This component may be crucial for networking future quantum processors.

The Frontier at the Millimeter Wave

To support increased data transfer rates and better picture resolution, modern communication systems are being forced to operate at higher frequencies. For both classical and quantum applications, the mm-wave spectrum, which spans from 30 GHz to 300 GHz, presents a mostly unexplored area, whereas conventional microwave systems function in the low gigahertz (GHz) range.

The researchers concentrated on the 107 GHz frequency under the direction of Jason F. Herrmann and Kevin K. S. Multani. One clear benefit of using this high-frequency regime for quantum science is that superconducting processors at these frequencies can operate at higher temperatures than conventional microwave qubits. The enormous scaling obstacles that fault-tolerant quantum computing currently faces may be lessened as a result of this access to far more cooling power.

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The Transducer’s architecture

A complex interaction between light and matter is at the core of the apparatus. A thin-film lithium niobate (TFLN) optical racetrack resonator is combined with an on-chip niobium titanium nitride (NbTiN) superconducting resonator in the transducer.

In order to function, the electro-optic effect is necessary. The refractive index of the X-cut TFLN is modulated when a mm-wave signal at about 107 GHz enters the apparatus. This modulation generates new light sidebands when a “pump” laser operating at telecom wavelengths is present. A triply-resonant system was developed by the researchers by carefully matching the frequency of the mm-wave mode with the free spectral range (FSR) of the optical cavity. For the most effective photon conversion, this design makes sure that the generated optical sideband, the optical pump, and the input mm-wave are all resonant at the same time.

An average single-photon interaction rate (g0​/2π) of roughly 0.7 kHz and a maximum photon transduction efficiency of ηOE​≈0.82×10−6 were reported by the researchers.

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Overcoming Substrate Interference

The interference from “substrate modes” was one of the main issues found in the investigation. A sapphire substrate, about 500 µm thick, serves as the device’s own dielectric cavity at mm-wave frequencies. The superconducting resonator may hybridize with these extraneous modes, causing photons to be leached away and lowering the device’s overall performance.

To solve this, the researchers created a sophisticated input-output model with multiple parameters to simulate the transmission spectrum. According to their calculations, the number of supported substrate modes in the 95 GHz to 110 GHz range might be reduced from 29 to just one by decreasing the physical volume of the sapphire chip. This would pave the way for further hardware improvements.

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The Challenge of “Quasiparticle”

The interaction between the superconductor and the laser presents another challenge. The superconducting electrodes absorb scattered photons as the optical pump’s intensity increases. This process produces non-equilibrium quasiparticles and breaks Cooper pairs, which are electron pairs that provide resistance-free current.

By increasing the cavity’s internal loss and dissipation, these quasiparticles essentially raise the temperature. By properly measuring this effect, the scientists found that each extra intracavity photon caused a temperature shift of about 0.86 µK. The researchers suggest pulsing the optical pump, which gives the quasiparticle density time to return to thermal equilibrium in between conversion events, to lessen this in future quantum applications.

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A Route to Quantum Networks

The experiment shows that integrated mm-wave photonic systems are possibly better for hybrid quantum systems in spite of these obstacles. When this transducer is fully developed, it could connect superconducting qubits to optical fibers, allowing quantum information to be sent at room temperature over great distances.

Additionally, the fact that these transducers can function at higher-temperature stages within a dilution refrigerator is demonstrated by their ability to operate at 5 K, as opposed to the millikelvin temperatures needed for conventional microwave qubits. Multistage transduction, which connects existing microwave hardware to optical networks through a millimeter-wave intermediary, may eventually result from this.

The researchers argue that this study adds a crucial “missing element” to the quantum toolbox: an integrated method to translate between the long-distance capabilities of light and the high-speed world of millimeter-waves.

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