Scientists at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore have developed a new technology that uses ultra-thin niobium dichloride oxide thin sheets with a thickness of only 1.2 microns to generate entangled photon pairs required for quantum computation, which is expected to reduce the size of key components to one-thousandth of the original. This achievement represents a new direction for the application of Van der Waals stacking technology. The relevant paper was published in “Nature Photonics” on the 14th.

Zhitongcaijing · 10/17 00:09
Scientists at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore have developed a new technology that uses ultra-thin niobium dichloride oxide thin sheets with a thickness of only 1.2 microns to generate entangled photon pairs required for quantum computation, which is expected to reduce the size of key components to one-thousandth of the original. This achievement represents a new direction for the application of Van der Waals stacking technology. The relevant paper was published in “Nature Photonics” on the 14th.