Abstract
Directionality in integrated quantum photonics has emerged as a promising route towards achieving scalable quantum technologies with nonlinearities at the single-photon level. Topological photonic waveguides have been proposed as a novel approach to harnessing such directional light-matter interactions on-chip. However, uncertainties remain regarding the strength of the directional coupling of embedded quantum emitters to topological waveguides in comparison to conventional line defect waveguides. In this work we present an investigation of directional coupling in a range of waveguides using a combination of experimental, theoretical, and numerical analyses. We quantitatively characterize the position dependence of the light-matter coupling on several topological photonic waveguides and benchmark their directional coupling performance against conventional line defect waveguides. We conclude that topological waveguides underperform in comparison to conventional line defect waveguides, casting their directional optics credentials into doubt. To demonstrate this is not a question of the maturity of the field; we show that state-of-the-art inverse design methods, while capable of improving the directional emission of these topological waveguides, still place them significantly behind the operation of a conventional (glide-plane) photonic crystal waveguide. Our results and conclusions pave the way towards improving the implementation of quantitatively predicted quantum nonlinear effects on-chip. Published by the American Physical Society 2024
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