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Dive into the research topics where Edward H. Chen is active.

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Featured researches published by Edward H. Chen.


Nature Communications | 2015

Coherent spin control of a nanocavity-enhanced qubit in diamond

Luozhou Li; Tim Schröder; Edward H. Chen; Michael D. Walsh; Igal Bayn; Jordan Goldstein; Ophir Gaathon; Matthew E. Trusheim; Ming Lu; Jacob Mower; Mircea Cotlet; Matthew Markham; Daniel Twitchen; Dirk Englund

A central aim of quantum information processing is the efficient entanglement of multiple stationary quantum memories via photons. Among solid-state systems, the nitrogen-vacancy centre in diamond has emerged as an excellent optically addressable memory with second-scale electron spin coherence times. Recently, quantum entanglement and teleportation have been shown between two nitrogen-vacancy memories, but scaling to larger networks requires more efficient spin-photon interfaces such as optical resonators. Here we report such nitrogen-vacancy-nanocavity systems in the strong Purcell regime with optical quality factors approaching 10,000 and electron spin coherence times exceeding 200 μs using a silicon hard-mask fabrication process. This spin-photon interface is integrated with on-chip microwave striplines for coherent spin control, providing an efficient quantum memory for quantum networks.


Nano Letters | 2015

Efficient Photon Collection from a Nitrogen Vacancy Center in a Circular Bullseye Grating

Luozhou Li; Edward H. Chen; Jiabao Zheng; Sara Mouradian; Florian Dolde; Tim Schröder; Sinan Karaveli; Matthew Markham; Daniel Twitchen; Dirk Englund

Luozhou Li, 2 Edward H. Chen, 2 Jiabao Zheng, Sara L. Mouradian, Florian Dolde, Tim Schröder, Sinan Karaveli, Matthew L. Markham, Daniel J. Twitchen, and Dirk Englund ∗ These authors contributed equally. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, United States Dept. of Electrical Engineering, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027, United States Element Six, 3901 Burton Drive, Santa Clara, CA 95054, USA (Dated: 11 Sept 2014)


Journal of The Optical Society of America B-optical Physics | 2016

Quantum nanophotonics in diamond [Invited]

Tim Schröder; Sara Mouradian; Jiabao Zheng; Matthew E. Trusheim; Michael Walsh; Edward H. Chen; Luozhou Li; Igal Bayn; Dirk Englund

The past two decades have seen great advances in developing color centers in diamond for sensing, quantum information processing, and tests of quantum foundations. Increasingly, the success of these applications as well as fundamental investigations of light–matter interaction depend on improved control of optical interactions with color centers—from better fluorescence collection to efficient and precise coupling with confined single optical modes. Wide ranging research efforts have been undertaken to address these demands through advanced nanofabrication of diamond. This review will cover recent advances in diamond nano- and microphotonic structures for efficient light collection, color center to nanocavity coupling, hybrid integration of diamond devices with other material systems, and the wide range of fabrication methods that have enabled these complex photonic diamond systems.


Applied Physics Letters | 2014

Fabrication of triangular nanobeam waveguide networks in bulk diamond using single-crystal silicon hard masks

Igal Bayn; Sara Mouradian; Luozhou Li; Jordan Goldstein; Tim Schröder; Jiabao Zheng; Edward H. Chen; Ophir Gaathon; Ming Lu; Aaron Stein; C. A. Ruggiero; J. Salzman; R. Kalish; Dirk Englund

A scalable approach for integrated photonic networks in single-crystal diamond using triangular etching of bulk samples is presented. We describe designs of high quality factor (Q = 2.51 × 106) photonic crystal cavities with low mode volume (Vm = 1.062 × (λ/n)3), which are connected via waveguides supported by suspension structures with predicted transmission loss of only 0.05 dB. We demonstrate the fabrication of these structures using transferred single-crystal silicon hard masks and angular dry etching, yielding photonic crystal cavities in the visible spectrum with measured quality factors in excess of Q = 3 × 103.


Nano Letters | 2014

Scalable Fabrication of High Purity Diamond Nanocrystals with Long-Spin-Coherence Nitrogen Vacancy Centers

Matthew E. Trusheim; Luozhou Li; Abdelghani Laraoui; Edward H. Chen; H. Bakhru; Tim Schröder; Ophir Gaathon; Carlos A. Meriles; Dirk Englund

The combination of long spin coherence time and nanoscale size has made nitrogen vacancy (NV) centers in nanodiamonds the subject of much interest for quantum information and sensing applications. However, currently available high-pressure high-temperature (HPHT) nanodiamonds have a high concentration of paramagnetic impurities that limit their spin coherence time to the order of microseconds, less than 1% of that observed in bulk diamond. In this work, we use a porous metal mask and a reactive ion etching process to fabricate nanocrystals from high-purity chemical vapor deposition (CVD) diamond. We show that NV centers in these CVD nanodiamonds exhibit record-long spin coherence times in excess of 200 μs, enabling magnetic field sensitivities of 290 nT Hz(-1/2) with the spatial resolution characteristic of a 50 nm diameter probe.


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2014

Surface Structure of Aerobically Oxidized Diamond Nanocrystals.

Abraham Wolcott; Theanne Schiros; Matthew E. Trusheim; Edward H. Chen; Dennis Nordlund; Rosa E. Diaz; Ophir Gaathon; Dirk Englund; Jonathan S. Owen

We investigate the aerobic oxidation of high-pressure, high-temperature nanodiamonds (5–50 nm dimensions) using a combination of carbon and oxygen K-edge X-ray absorption, wavelength-dependent X-ray photoelectron, and vibrational spectroscopies. Oxidation at 575 °C for 2 h eliminates graphitic carbon contamination (>98%) and produces nanocrystals with hydroxyl functionalized surfaces as well as a minor component (<5%) of carboxylic anhydrides. The low graphitic carbon content and the high crystallinity of HPHT are evident from Raman spectra acquired using visible wavelength excitation (λexcit = 633 nm) as well as carbon K-edge X-ray absorption spectra where the signature of a core–hole exciton is observed. Both spectroscopic features are similar to those of chemical vapor deposited (CVD) diamond but differ significantly from the spectra of detonation nanodiamond. The importance of these findings to the functionalization of nanodiamond surfaces for biological labeling applications is discussed.


Light-Science & Applications | 2016

Efficient photon coupling from a diamond nitrogen vacancy center by integration with silica fiber

Rishi N. Patel; Tim Schröder; Noel Heng Loon Wan; Luozhou Li; Sara Mouradian; Edward H. Chen; Dirk Englund

A central goal in quantum information science is to efficiently interface photons with single optical modes for quantum networking and distributed quantum computing. Here, we introduce and experimentally demonstrate a compact and efficient method for the low-loss coupling of a solid-state qubit, the nitrogen vacancy (NV) center in diamond, with a single-mode optical fiber. In this approach, single-mode tapered diamond waveguides containing exactly one high quality NV memory are selected and integrated on tapered silica fibers. Numerical optimization of an adiabatic coupler indicates that near-unity-efficiency photon transfer is possible between the two modes. Experimentally, we find an overall collection efficiency between 16% and 37% and estimate a single photon count rate at saturation above 700 kHz. This integrated system enables robust, alignment-free, and efficient interfacing of single-mode optical fibers with single photon emitters and quantum memories in solids.


Nano Letters | 2015

Generation of Ensembles of Individually Resolvable Nitrogen Vacancies Using Nanometer-Scale Apertures in Ultrahigh-Aspect Ratio Planar Implantation Masks

Igal Bayn; Edward H. Chen; Matthew E. Trusheim; Luozhou Li; Tim Schröder; Ophir Gaathon; Ming Lu; Aaron Stein; Mingzhao Liu; Kim Kisslinger; Hannah Clevenson; Dirk Englund

A central challenge in developing magnetically coupled quantum registers in diamond is the fabrication of nitrogen vacancy (NV) centers with localization below ∼20 nm to enable fast dipolar interaction compared to the NV decoherence rate. Here, we demonstrate the targeted, high throughput formation of NV centers using masks with a thickness of 270 nm and feature sizes down to ∼1 nm. Super-resolution imaging resolves NVs with a full-width maximum distribution of 26 ± 7 nm and a distribution of NV-NV separations of 16 ± 5 nm.


Nature Communications | 2015

High-resolution optical spectroscopy using multimode interference in a compact tapered fibre.

Noel H. Wan; Fan Meng; Tim Schröder; Ren-Jye Shiue; Edward H. Chen; Dirk Englund

Optical spectroscopy is a fundamental tool in numerous areas of science and technology. Much effort has focused on miniaturizing spectrometers, but thus far at the cost of spectral resolution and broad operating range. Here we describe a compact spectrometer that achieves both high spectral resolution and broad bandwidth. The device relies on imaging multimode interference from leaky modes along a multimode tapered optical fibre, resulting in spectrally distinguishable spatial patterns over a wide range of wavelengths from 500 to 1,600 nm. This tapered fibre multimode interference spectrometer achieves a spectral resolution down to 40 pm in the visible spectrum and 10 pm in the near-infrared spectrum (corresponding to resolving powers of 10(4)-10(5)). Multimode interference spectroscopy is suitable in a variety of device geometries, including planar waveguides in a broad range of transparent materials.


Applied Physics Letters | 2014

Waveguide-integrated photonic crystal spectrometer with camera readout

Fan Meng; Ren-Jye Shiue; Noel Wan; Luozhou Li; Jing Nie; Nicholas C. Harris; Edward H. Chen; Tim Schröder; Nadia K. Pervez; Ioannis Kymissis; Dirk Englund

We demonstrate an infrared spectrometer based on waveguide-coupled nanocavity filters in a planar photonic crystal structure. The input light is coupled into the waveguide, from which spectral components are dropped into the cavities and radiated off-chip for detection on a commercial InGaAs camera. The spectrometer has a footprint of only 60 μm by 8 μm. The spectral resolution is about 1 nm in the operation bandwidth of 1522–1545 nm. By substituting the membrane material and structure parameters, this design can be easily extended into the visible regime and developed for a variety of highly efficient, miniature photonic applications.

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Dirk Englund

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Luozhou Li

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Tim Schröder

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Matthew E. Trusheim

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Igal Bayn

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Ophir Gaathon

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Sara Mouradian

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Danielle Braje

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Fan Meng

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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