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25 - 30 January 2025
San Francisco, California, US
Conference 13369 > Paper 13369-8
Paper 13369-8

Advances in quantum dot light sources for silicon photonics and quantum photonics (Keynote Presentation)

27 January 2025 • 3:40 PM - 4:25 PM PST | Moscone South, Room 307 (Level 3)

Abstract

The 2023 Nobel Prize in Chemistry awarded to three US-based scientists by recognizing their 40-year achievement in nanoparticles and colloidal quantum dot (QDs). In parallel, however, in 1981/82, we proposed the concept of 3D quantum-confined heterostructures (i.e., QDs) and their application to lasers as a new development in semiconductor nanophysics that began with semiconductor superlattices. Subsequent advances made QDs one of the fundamental nanostructures in photonics and electronics. In particular, QD lasers are the first practical quantum mechanical devices that take advantage of the fully discrete nature of electron energy, with approximately one million chips shipped to the market each year. Nowadays, QDs are also applied to quantum computing and quantum communications. In this talk, we review the early explorations of QD technology in physics and chemistry and describe recent advances in QD lasers as an essential light source for silicon photonics, enabling COP/IOI. We also discuss the current state of the art for realizing high-quality QD-based single-photon sources for quantum-integrated photonics.

Presenter

Yasuhiko Arakawa
The Univ. of Tokyo (Japan)
Dr. Arakawa is a Specially-Appointed Professor and Director of Quantum Innovation Co-Creation Center, the Institute of Nano Quantum Information Electronics at the University of Tokyo (UT). He received his PhD from the University of Tokyo in 1980 and immediately appointed as an Assistant Professor of UT. Then, he was promoted to Associate Professor in 1981 and became a full Professor in 1993. He served as ICO from 2024 to 2017. He has been a Foreign Member of the US National Academy of Engineering (NAE) from 2017. He received numerous awards, including Leo Esaki Award in 2004, IEEE/LEOS William Streifer Award in 2006, IEEE David Sarnoff Award in 2009, Prime Minister Award in 2009, the Medal with Purple Ribbon in 2009, C&C Prize in 2010, Heinrich Welker Award in 2011, OSA Nick Holonyak Jr. Award in 2011, the Japan Academy Prize in 2017, IEEE Jun-ichi Nishizawa Medal in 2018, URSI Balthasar Van der Pol Gold Medal in 2023, and the honor of a Person of Cultural Merit in 2023.
Application tracks: Photonic Chips
Presenter/Author
Yasuhiko Arakawa
The Univ. of Tokyo (Japan)