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Superconducting nanowire for single-photon detection: progress, challenges and opportunities

Published 24 Jul 2018 in physics.ins-det and physics.app-ph | (1807.09060v3)

Abstract: Single-photon detectors and nanoscale superconducting devices are two major candidates for realizing quantum technologies. Superconducting-nanowire single-photon detectors (SNSPDs) comprise these two solid-state and optic aspects enabling high-rate (1.3 GBit s-1) quantum key distribution over long distances (>400 km), long-range (>1200 km) quantum communication as well as space communication (239,000 miles). The attractiveness of SNSPDs stems from competitive performance in the four single-photon relevant characteristics at wavelengths ranges from UV to the mid IR: high detection efficiency, low false-signal rate, low uncertainty in photon time arrival and fast reset time. However, to-date, these characteristics cannot be optimized simultaneously. In this review, we present the mechanisms that govern these four characteristics and demonstrate how they are affected by material properties and device design as well as by the operating conditions, allowing aware optimization of SNSPDs. Based on the evolution in the existing literature and state-of-the-art, we propose how to choose or design the material and device for optimizing SNSPD performance, while we also highlight possible future opportunities in the SNSPD technology.

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