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      Terahertz nanospectroscopy of plasmon polaritons for the evaluation of doping in quantum devices

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          Abstract

          Terahertz (THz) waves are a highly sensitive probe of free carrier concentrations in semiconducting materials. However, most experiments operate in the far-field, which precludes the observation of nanoscale features that affect the material response. Here, we demonstrate the use of nanoscale THz plasmon polaritons as an indicator of surface quality in prototypical quantum devices properties. Using THz near-field hyperspectral measurements, we observe polaritonic features in doped silicon near a metal-semiconductor interface. The presence of the THz surface plasmon polariton indicates the existence of a thin film doped layer on the device. Using a multilayer extraction procedure utilising vector calibration, we quantitatively probe the doped surface layer and determine its thickness and complex permittivity. The recovered multilayer characteristics match the dielectric conditions necessary to support the THz surface plasmon polariton. Applying these findings to superconducting resonators, we show that etching of this doped layer leads to an increase of the quality factor as determined by cryogenic measurements. This study demonstrates that THz scattering-type scanning near-field optical microscopy (s-SNOM) is a promising diagnostic tool for characterization of surface dielectric properties of quantum devices.

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          Principles of Nano-Optics

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            Near-field microscopy by elastic light scattering from a tip.

            We describe ultraresolution microscopy far beyond the classical Abbe diffraction limit of one half wavelength (lambda/2), and also beyond the practical limit (ca. lambda/10) of aperture-based scanning near-field optical microscopy (SNOM). The 'apertureless' SNOM discussed here uses light scattering from a sharp tip (hence scattering-type or s-SNOM) and has no lambda-related resolution limit. Rather, its resolution is approximately equal to the radius a of the probing tip (for commercial tips, a < 20 nm) so that 10 nm is obtained in the visible (lambda/60). A resolution of lambda/500 has been obtained in the mid-infrared at lambda = 10 microm. The advantage of infrared, terahertz and even microwave illumination is that specific excitations can be exploited to yield specific contrast, e.g. the molecular vibration offering a spectroscopic fingerprint to identify chemical composition. S-SNOM can routinely acquire simultaneous amplitude and phase images to obtain information on refractive and absorptive properties. Plasmon- or phonon-resonant materials can be highlighted by their particularly high near-field signal level. Furthermore, s-SNOM can map the characteristic optical eigenfields of small, optically resonant particles. Lastly, we describe theoretical modelling that explains and predicts s-SNOM contrast on the basis of the local dielectric function.
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              Fidelity benchmarks for two-qubit gates in silicon

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Nanophotonics
                Walter de Gruyter GmbH
                2192-8614
                May 08 2023
                April 03 2023
                May 01 2023
                May 08 2023
                April 03 2023
                May 01 2023
                : 12
                : 10
                : 1865-1875
                Affiliations
                [1 ]School of Information Technology and Electrical Engineering , The University of Queensland , St Lucia , Brisbane , 4072 , QLD , Australia
                [2 ]School of Mathematics and Physics , The University of Queensland , St Lucia , Brisbane , 4072 , QLD , Australia
                [3 ]ARC Centre of Excellence for Engineered Quantum Systems , St Lucia , Brisbane , 4072 , QLD , Australia
                Article
                10.1515/nanoph-2023-0064
                968c1a1f-f2f7-419c-b571-a255b2a923ce
                © 2023

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0

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