Loading...
News Article

Semiconductor quantum transistor opens door for photon-based computing

News

The highly anticipated quantum science-based revolution in information technology requires the development of groundbreaking hardware comparable in function to the transistors used in today's computers.

Researchers at the University of Maryland's A. James Clark School of Engineering and Joint Quantum Institute (JQI) have cleared a hurdle in the development of such quantum-compatible hardware with their demonstration of the first single-photon transistor using a semiconductor chip.

Transistors are tiny switches that are the foundation of modern computing. Billions of them route electrical signals around inside the computers that power our smartphones, tablets and other devices. Quantum computers will need analogous hardware to manipulate quantum information. But the design constraints for this new information technology are stringent, and today's most advanced processors can't be repurposed as quantum devices. That's because quantum information carriers, dubbed qubits, have to follow the radically different rules laid out by quantum physics.

Scientists can use many kinds of quantum particles as qubits, even the photons that make up light. Photons have added appeal because they can swiftly shuttle information over long distances, and they are compatible with fabricated chips. However, making a quantum transistor triggered by light has been challenging because it requires that the photons interact with each other, something that doesn't ordinarily happen.

The Maryland research team headed by Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, JQI Fellow, and Institute for Research in Electronics and Applied Physics Affiliate Edo Waks"”has used a quantum memory to make photons interact, creating the first single-photon transistor made from a semiconductor.

The device has numerous holes in it, making it appear much like a honeycomb. Light entering the chip bounces around and gets trapped by the hole pattern. A small crystal sits inside the area where the light intensity is strongest, and, analogous to conventional computer memory, this crystal stores information about photons as they enter the device. It can then effectively tap into that memory to mediate interactions with other photons that later arrive at the chip.

The team observed that a single photon could, by interacting with the crystal, control the transmission of a second light pulse through the device. The first light pulse acts like a key, opening the door for the second photon to enter the chip. If the first pulse didn't contain any photons, the crystal blocked subsequent photons from getting through. This behaviour is similar to a conventional transistor where a small voltage controls the passage of current through its terminals. Here, the researchers successfully replaced the voltage with a single photon and demonstrated that their quantum transistor could switch a light pulse containing around 30 photons before the device's memory ran out.

"Using our transistor, we should be able to perform quantum gates between photons," says Waks. "Software running on a quantum computer would use a series of such operations to attain exponential speedup for certain computational problems.

Their device, described in the July 6 issue of Science, is compact; roughly one million of these new transistors could fit inside a single grain of salt. It is also fast and able to process 10 billion photonic qubits every second.

With realistic engineering improvements their approach could allow many quantum light transistors to be linked together, according to lead author Shuo Sun, a postdoctoral research fellow at Stanford University who was a UMD grad student at the time of the research. The team hopes that such speedy, highly connected devices will eventually lead to compact quantum computers that process large numbers of photonic qubits, .

The University of Maryland (UMD) is home to one of the world's top quantum science and technology communities, with over 200 quantum researchers on-site.

Lightwave Logic receives ECOC Innovation Award for Hybrid PIC/Optical Integration Platform
Coherent wins ECOC award for datacentre innovation
HyperLight announces $37 million funding round
Jabil expands silicon photonics capabilities
Ephos raises $8.5 million for glass-based photonic chips
Designing for manufacture: PAM-4 transmitters using segmented-electrode Mach-Zehnder modulators
OpenLight and Epiphany partner on PIC ecosystem
NewPhotonics and SoftBank team up on advanced photonics
POET and Mitsubishi collaborate on 3.2T optical engines
Integrated photonic platforms: The case for SiC
Integrating high-speed germanium modulators with silicon photonics and fast electronics
Lightium Secures $7 Million Seed Funding
Revolutionising optoelectronics with high-precision bonding
Fraunhofer IMS invites participation in PIC engineering runs
Advances in active alignment engines for efficient photonics device test and assembly
Aeva announces participation at IAA Transportation 2024
Sumitomo Electric announces participation in ECOC 2024
Quside receives NIST certification for quantum entropy source
DustPhotonics launches industry-first merchant 1.6T silicon photonics engine
Arelion and Ciena announce live 1.6T wave data transmission
DGIST leads joint original semiconductor research with the EU
POET Technologies reorganises engineering team
A silicon chip for 6G communications
South Dakota Mines wins $5 million from NSF for Quantum Materials Institute
HieFo indium phosphide fab resumes production
Coherent launches new lasers for silicon photonics transceivers
AlixLabs wins funding from PhotonHub Europe
Sandia National Labs and Arizona State University join forces
Perovskite waveguides for nonlinear photonics
A graphene-based infrared emitter
Atom interferometry performed with silicon photonics
A step towards combining the conventional and quantum internet

×
Search the news archive

To close this popup you can press escape or click the close icon.
Logo
x
Logo
×
Register - Step 1

You may choose to subscribe to the PIC Magazine, the PIC Newsletter, or both. You may also request additional information if required, before submitting your application.


Please subscribe me to:

 

You chose the industry type of "Other"

Please enter the industry that you work in:
Please enter the industry that you work in: