Superconducting Silicon-photonic Chip Developed For Quantum Communication Access

Superconducting Silicon-photonic Chip Developed For Quantum Communication Access

A significant advancement enabled by this chip is the of time-bin encoded qubits.

Integrated quantum photonics (IQP) has evolved from a laboratory curiosity into a practical foundation for metropolitan quantum networks. A major milestone in this field is the development of a heterogeneously integrated superconducting silicon-photonic chip, which combines the mature scalability of silicon-on-insulator (SOI) platforms with the extreme sensitivity of superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors (SNSPDs). 1. Core Architecture and Integration

The chip leverages the Silicon-on-Insulator (SOI) platform for its dense optical components, including waveguides, Bragg filters, and ring resonators. A significant advancement enabled by this chip is

A superconducting silicon-photonic chip for quantum communication

: By using a traveling-wave configuration rather than normal incidence, the SNSPDs achieve on-chip detection efficiencies exceeding 90%. A significant advancement enabled by this chip is

: Researchers have successfully integrated Superconducting Nanowire Single-Photon Detectors (SNSPDs) directly onto silicon waveguides.

2. Breakthrough: Solving the Bell-State Measurement Challenge A significant advancement enabled by this chip is

Technical Brief: Heterogeneously Integrated Superconducting Silicon-Photonic Chips