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Portrait of Ville Maisi. Photo: Kennet Ruona

Ville Maisi

Assistant Professor, Coordinator Quantum Physics

Portrait of Ville Maisi. Photo: Kennet Ruona

Efficient and continuous microwave photoconversion in hybrid cavity-semiconductor nanowire double quantum dot diodes

Author

  • Waqar Khan
  • Patrick P. Potts
  • Sebastian Lehmann
  • Claes Thelander
  • Kimberly A. Dick
  • Peter Samuelsson
  • Ville F. Maisi

Summary, in English

Converting incoming photons to electrical current is the key operation principle of optical photodetectors and it enables a host of emerging quantum information technologies. The leading approach for continuous and efficient detection in the optical domain builds on semiconductor photodiodes. However, there is a paucity of efficient and continuous photon detectors in the microwave regime, because photon energies are four to five orders of magnitude lower therein and conventional photodiodes do not have that sensitivity. Here we tackle this gap and demonstrate how microwave photons can be efficiently and continuously converted to electrical current in a high-quality, semiconducting nanowire double quantum dot resonantly coupled to a cavity. In particular, in our photodiode device, an absorbed photon gives rise to a single electron tunneling through the double dot, with a conversion efficiency reaching 6%.

Department/s

  • Solid State Physics
  • NanoLund: Center for Nanoscience
  • Mathematical Physics

Publishing year

2021-12

Language

English

Publication/Series

Nature Communications

Volume

12

Issue

1

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

Topic

  • Physical Sciences
  • Condensed Matter Physics

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 2041-1723