Litcius/Paper detail

Resonant and phonon-assisted ultrafast coherent control of a single hBN color center

Johann A. Preuß, Daniel Groll, Robert Schmidt, Thilo Hahn, Paweł Machnikowski, Rudolf Bratschitsch, T. Kühn, Steffen Michaelis de Vasconcellos, Daniel Wigger

2022Optica26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Single-photon emitters in solid-state systems are important building blocks for scalable quantum technologies. Recently, quantum light emitters have been discovered in the wide-gap van der Waals insulator hexagonal boron nitride (hBN). These color centers have attracted considerable attention due to their quantum performance at elevated temperatures and wide range of transition energies. Here, we demonstrate coherent state manipulation of a single hBN color center with ultrafast laser pulses and investigate in our joint experiment–theory study the coupling between the electronic system and phonons. We demonstrate that coherent control can be performed not only resonantly on the optical transition giving access to the decoherence but also phonon-assisted, which reveals the internal phonon quantum dynamics. In the case of optical phonons, we measure their decoherence, stemming in part from their anharmonic decay. Dephasing induced by the creation of acoustic phonons manifests as a rapid decrease in the coherent control signal when traveling phonon wave packets are emitted. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the quantum superposition between a phonon-assisted process and resonant excitation causes ultrafast oscillations of the coherent control signal. Our results pave the way for ultrafast phonon quantum state control on the nanoscale and open up a new promising perspective for hybrid quantum technologies.

Topics & Concepts

PhononDephasingCoherent controlPhysicsQuantum decoherenceQuantum technologyUltrashort pulsePhotonPolaritonQuantum superpositionQuantumCondensed matter physicsQuantum mechanicsOpen quantum systemLaserAdvanced Fiber Laser TechnologiesMechanical and Optical ResonatorsDiamond and Carbon-based Materials Research