Review Article: Quantum Nanophotonics in Diamond

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 con...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Schroder, Tim (Contributor), Mouradian, Sara L (Contributor), Zheng, Jiabao (Contributor), Trusheim, Matthew E (Contributor), Walsh, Michael (Contributor), Chen, Edward H (Contributor), Li, Luozhou (Contributor), Bayn, Igal Igor (Contributor), Englund, Dirk R. (Contributor)
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (Contributor)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Optical Society of America, 2017-09-18T14:45:19Z.
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Summary: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.
United States. Air Force Office of Scientific Research (FA9550-11-1-0014)
United States. Department of Energy. Office of Basic Energy Sciences (DE-SC0012704)