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Dive into the research topics where Tommaso Pregnolato is active.

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Featured researches published by Tommaso Pregnolato.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2015

Deterministic photon–emitter coupling in chiral photonic circuits

Immo Söllner; Sahand Mahmoodian; Sofie Lindskov Hansen; Leonardo Midolo; Alisa Javadi; Gabija Kiršanskė; Tommaso Pregnolato; Haitham El-Ella; Eun Hye Lee; Jin Dong Song; Søren Stobbe; Peter Lodahl

Engineering photon emission and scattering is central to modern photonics applications ranging from light harvesting to quantum-information processing. To this end, nanophotonic waveguides are well suited as they confine photons to a one-dimensional geometry and thereby increase the light-matter interaction. In a regular waveguide, a quantum emitter interacts equally with photons in either of the two propagation directions. This symmetry is violated in nanophotonic structures in which non-transversal local electric-field components imply that photon emission and scattering may become directional. Here we show that the helicity of the optical transition of a quantum emitter determines the direction of single-photon emission in a specially engineered photonic-crystal waveguide. We observe single-photon emission into the waveguide with a directionality that exceeds 90% under conditions in which practically all the emitted photons are coupled to the waveguide. The chiral light-matter interaction enables deterministic and highly directional photon emission for experimentally achievable on-chip non-reciprocal photonic elements. These may serve as key building blocks for single-photon optical diodes, transistors and deterministic quantum gates. Furthermore, chiral photonic circuits allow the dissipative preparation of entangled states of multiple emitters for experimentally achievable parameters, may lead to novel topological photon states and could be applied for directional steering of light.


Nature Communications | 2015

Single-photon non-linear optics with a quantum dot in a waveguide

Alisa Javadi; Immo Söllner; M. Arcari; S. Lindskov Hansen; Leonardo Midolo; Sahand Mahmoodian; Gabija Kiršanskė; Tommaso Pregnolato; Eun Ha Lee; Jin Dong Song; Søren Stobbe; Peter Lodahl

Strong non-linear interactions between photons enable logic operations for both classical and quantum-information technology. Unfortunately, non-linear interactions are usually feeble and therefore all-optical logic gates tend to be inefficient. A quantum emitter deterministically coupled to a propagating mode fundamentally changes the situation, since each photon inevitably interacts with the emitter, and highly correlated many-photon states may be created. Here we show that a single quantum dot in a photonic-crystal waveguide can be used as a giant non-linearity sensitive at the single-photon level. The non-linear response is revealed from the intensity and quantum statistics of the scattered photons, and contains contributions from an entangled photon–photon bound state. The quantum non-linearity will find immediate applications for deterministic Bell-state measurements and single-photon transistors and paves the way to scalable waveguide-based photonic quantum-computing architectures.


arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2017

Efficient fiber-coupled single-photon source based on quantum dots in a photonic-crystal waveguide

Raphaël S. Daveau; Krishna C. Balram; Tommaso Pregnolato; Jin Liu; Eun Ha Lee; Jin D. Song; Varun B. Verma; Richard P. Mirin; Sae Woo Nam; Leonardo Midolo; Søren Stobbe; Kartik Srinivasan; Peter Lodahl

Many photonic quantum information processing applications would benefit from a high brightness, fiber-coupled source of triggered single photons. Here, we present a fiber-coupled photonic-crystal waveguide single-photon source relying on evanescent coupling of the light field from a tapered out-coupler to an optical fiber. A two-step approach is taken where the performance of the tapered out-coupler is recorded first on an independent device containing an on-chip reflector. Reflection measurements establish that the chip-to-fiber coupling efficiency exceeds 80 %. The detailed characterization of a high-efficiency photonic-crystal waveguide extended with a tapered out-coupling section is then performed. The corresponding overall single-photon source efficiency is 10.9 % ± 2.3 %, which quantifies the success probability to prepare an exciton in the quantum dot, couple it out as a photon in the waveguide, and subsequently transfer it to the fiber. The applied out-coupling method is robust, stable over time, and broadband over several tens of nanometers, which makes it a highly promising pathway to increase the efficiency and reliability of planar chip-based single-photon sources.


Physical Review B | 2017

Indistinguishable and efficient single photons from a quantum dot in a planar nanobeam waveguide

Gabija Kiršanskė; Henri Thyrrestrup; Raphaël S. Daveau; Chris L. Dreeßen; Tommaso Pregnolato; Leonardo Midolo; Petru Tighineanu; Alisa Javadi; Søren Stobbe; Rüdiger Schott; Arne Ludwig; Andreas D. Wieck; Suk In Park; Jin D. Song; Andreas V. Kuhlmann; Immo Söllner; Matthias C. Löbl; Richard J. Warburton; Peter Lodahl

We demonstrate a high-purity source of indistinguishable single photons using a quantum dot embedded in a nanophotonic waveguide. The source features a near-unity internal coupling efficiency and the collected photons are efficiently coupled off-chip by implementing a taper that adiabatically couples the photons to an optical fiber. By quasi-resonant excitation of the quantum dot, we measure a single-photon purity larger than 99.4% and a photon indistinguishability of up to 94+-1% by using p-shell excitation combined with spectral filtering to reduce photon jitter. A temperature-dependent study allows pinpointing the residual decoherence processes notably the effect of phonon broadening. Strict resonant excitation is implemented as well as another mean of suppressing photon jitter, and the additional complexity of suppressing the excitation laser source is addressed. The study opens a clear pathway towards the long-standing goal of a fully deterministic source of indistinguishable photons, which is integrated on a planar photonic chip.


Nanotechnology | 2015

Soft-mask fabrication of gallium arsenide nanomembranes for integrated quantum photonics.

Leonardo Midolo; Tommaso Pregnolato; Gabija Kiršanskė; Søren Stobbe

We report on the fabrication of quantum photonic integrated circuits based on suspended GaAs membranes. The fabrication process consists of a single lithographic step followed by inductively coupled-plasma dry etching through an electron-beam-resist mask and wet etching of a sacrificial layer. This method does not require depositing, etching, and stripping a hard mask, greatly reducing fabrication time and costs, while at the same time yielding devices of excellent structural quality. We discuss in detail the procedures for cleaning the resist residues caused by the plasma etching and present a statistical analysis of the etched feature size after each fabrication step.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2018

Spin–photon interface and spin-controlled photon switching in a nanobeam waveguide

Alisa Javadi; Dapeng Ding; Martin Hayhurst Appel; Sahand Mahmoodian; Matthias C. Löbl; Immo Söllner; Rüdiger Schott; Camille Papon; Tommaso Pregnolato; Søren Stobbe; Leonardo Midolo; Tim Schröder; Andreas D. Wieck; Arne Ludwig; Richard J. Warburton; Peter Lodahl

The spin of an electron is a promising memory state and qubit. Connecting spin states that are spatially far apart will enable quantum nodes and quantum networks based on the electron spin. Towards this goal, an integrated spin–photon interface would be a major leap forward as it combines the memory capability of a single spin with the efficient transfer of information by photons. Here, we demonstrate such an efficient and optically programmable interface between the spin of an electron in a quantum dot and photons in a nanophotonic waveguide. The spin can be deterministically prepared in the ground state with a fidelity of up to 96%. Subsequently, the system is used to implement a single-spin photonic switch, in which the spin state of the electron directs the flow of photons through the waveguide. The spin–photon interface may enable on-chip photon–photon gates, single-photon transistors and the efficient generation of a photonic cluster state.The spin state of a single electron is shown to control the transmission of single photons through a nanophotonic waveguide, thus realizing a spin-based photonic switch.


Nano Letters | 2018

Quantum Optics with Near-Lifetime-Limited Quantum-Dot Transitions in a Nanophotonic Waveguide

Henri Thyrrestrup; Gabija Kiršanskė; Hanna Le Jeannic; Tommaso Pregnolato; Liang Zhai; Laust Raahauge; Leonardo Midolo; N. Rotenberg; Alisa Javadi; Rüdiger Schott; Andreas D. Wieck; Arne Ludwig; Matthias C. Löbl; Immo Söllner; Richard J. Warburton; Peter Lodahl

Establishing a highly efficient photon-emitter interface where the intrinsic linewidth broadening is limited solely by spontaneous emission is a key step in quantum optics. It opens a pathway to coherent light-matter interaction for, e.g., the generation of highly indistinguishable photons, few-photon optical nonlinearities, and photon-emitter quantum gates. However, residual broadening mechanisms are ubiquitous and need to be combated. For solid-state emitters charge and nuclear spin noise are of importance, and the influence of photonic nanostructures on the broadening has not been clarified. We present near-lifetime-limited linewidths for quantum dots embedded in nanophotonic waveguides through a resonant transmission experiment. It is found that the scattering of single photons from the quantum dot can be obtained with an extinction of 66 ± 4%, which is limited by the coupling of the quantum dot to the nanostructure rather than the linewidth broadening. This is obtained by embedding the quantum dot in an electrically contacted nanophotonic membrane. A clear pathway to obtaining even larger single-photon extinction is laid out; i.e., the approach enables a fully deterministic and coherent photon-emitter interface in the solid state that is operated at optical frequencies.


Physical Review B | 2017

Narrow optical linewidths and spin pumping on charge-tunable close-to-surface self-assembled quantum dots in an ultrathin diode

Matthias C. Löbl; Immo Söllner; Alisa Javadi; Tommaso Pregnolato; Rüdiger Schott; Leonardo Midolo; Andreas V. Kuhlmann; Søren Stobbe; Andreas D. Wieck; Peter Lodahl; Arne Ludwig; Richard J. Warburton

We demonstrate full charge control, narrow optical linewidths, and optical spin pumping on single self-assembled InGaAs quantum dots embedded in a


conference on lasers and electro optics | 2018

Spin-Photon Interface Controlled Optical Switching in a Nanobeam Waveguide

Tim Schröder; Alisa Javadi; Dapeng Ding; Martin Hayhurst Appel; Sahand Mahmoodian; Matthias C. Löbl; Immo Söllner; Rudiger Schott; Camille Papon; Tommaso Pregnolato; Søren Stobbe; Leonardo Midolo; Andreas D. Wieck; Arne Ludwig; Richard J. Warburton; Peter Lodahl

162.5\,\text{nm}


conference on lasers and electro optics | 2018

Near lifetime-limited emitter in a nanophotonic waveguide

Henri Thyrrestrup; G. Kirsanske; H. Le Jeannic; Tommaso Pregnolato; L. Zhai; Leonardo Midolo; N. Rotenberg; Alisa Javadi; Rüdiger Schott; Andreas D. Wieck; Arne Ludwig; Matthias C. Löbl; Immo Söllner; R. J. Warburton Lodahl

thin diode structure. The quantum dots are just

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Peter Lodahl

University of Copenhagen

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Alisa Javadi

University of Copenhagen

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Immo Söllner

University of Copenhagen

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Søren Stobbe

Technical University of Denmark

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Arne Ludwig

Ruhr University Bochum

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