Rice U.’s Songtao Chen wins NSF CAREER Award
Research seeks to leverage point defects in silicon to advance quantum communication and computing
2023-07-06
(Press-News.org) HOUSTON – (July 6, 2023) – Songtao Chen, an assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at Rice University, has won a prestigious National Science Foundation CAREER Award to advance the development of quantum networks by leveraging imperfections ⎯ known as point defects ⎯ in silicon material.
The grants are awarded each year to a selective cohort of about 500 early career faculty across all disciplines engaged in pathbreaking research and committed to growing their field through outreach and education.
Chen will use the five-year, $750,000 grant to study how the quantum-level interaction between light and matter can help remove barriers limiting the large-scale implementation of quantum communication and computing, which could help tackle complex problems in medicine, cybersecurity, artificial intelligence, engineering, etc.
Chen’s research investigates how the interaction between photons and T centers, a recently identified type of point defect in silicon, can be used for quantum information applications.
“Atoms in solid-state silicon are organized in a perfect lattice,” Chen said. “The T center is a point defect in the regularity of this lattice. This defect has a spin component that we can use to build qubits and an optical component that can be exploited to interface with the spin. Research on the coherent control, measurement and entanglement of T center qubits could help turn them into building blocks of quantum network nodes.”
One of the most challenging aspects of quantum communication that Chen hopes to address is signal-loss during transmission.
“Whenever the photons that make up an optical signal propagate in an optical fiber, some of them will get lost as they travel over a certain distance, meaning the signal grows weaker the longer it propagates. Signal-loss grows exponentially with distance,” Chen said.
T centers generate photons that are significantly less likely to get lost during signal transmission, making them particularly well-suited to fiber-optic telecommunication.
“Silicon is a mature platform that has been the foundation for the success of integrated circuits and silicon photonics in the past decades,” Chen said. “Photonic device integration on the silicon platform could help enhance optical control and measurement of T centers.
“One of my long-term research goals is to develop T center-based silicon quantum photonic chips and build a fully functional quantum information processing system with a small footprint.”
In addition to research, Chen plans to develop and implement educational and outreach programs to engage students at different stages of instruction in quantum research.
“Because of the rapid development of quantum research, we are, to some extent, in a shortage of talented and diverse students and researchers,” Chen said. “We plan to address that at the graduate and undergraduate levels. We also have plans to include high school-level education outreach.”
-30-
This release can be found online at news.rice.edu.
Follow Rice News and Media Relations via Twitter @RiceUNews.
CAREER Award abstract:
https://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=2238298&HistoricalAwards=false
Image downloads:
https://news-network.rice.edu/news/files/2023/06/230608_ARPA_Fitlow_11.jpg
CAPTION: Songtao Chen is an assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at Rice University. (Photo by Jeff Fitlow/Rice University)
Related stories:
Rice Quantum Initiative hires first two faculty:
https://quantum.rice.edu/news/rice-quantum-initiative-hires-first-two-faculty
Three new faculty join ECE department:
https://eceweb.rice.edu/news/three-new-faculty-join-ece-department
Links:
Chen lab: https://chenlab.rice.edu/
Quantum Initiative: https://quantum.rice.edu/
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering: https://eceweb.rice.edu/
George R. Brown School of Engineering: https://engineering.rice.edu
Located on a 300-acre forested campus in Houston, Rice University is consistently ranked among the nation’s top 20 universities by U.S. News & World Report. Rice has highly respected schools of Architecture, Business, Continuing Studies, Engineering, Humanities, Music, Natural Sciences and Social Sciences and is home to the Baker Institute for Public Policy. With 4,552 undergraduates and 3,998 graduate students, Rice’s undergraduate student-to-faculty ratio is just under 6-to-1. Its residential college system builds close-knit communities and lifelong friendships, just one reason why Rice is ranked No. 1 for lots of race/class interaction and No. 4 for quality of life by the Princeton Review. Rice is also rated as a best value among private universities by Kiplinger’s Personal Finance.
If you do not wish to receive news releases from Rice University, reply to this email and write “unsubscribe” in the subject line. Office of News and Media Relations – MS 300, Rice University, 6100 Main St., Houston, TX 77005
END
[Attachments] See images for this press release:
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2023-07-06
VANCOUVER, Wash. – The invasive Asian clam is more common in the lower Columbia River than its native habitat of southeast Asia, according to a study of the clam’s abundance in the river.
The findings don’t bode well for potential future invasions by the even more destructive quagga and zebra mussels. So far, the Columbia is one of the only major U.S. rivers to remain free of these notorious ecology-destroying, equipment-clogging bivalves.
To understand how new invaders might spread, a Washington State University-led ...
2023-07-06
Karma Nanglu says his favorite animal is whichever one he’s working on. But his latest subject may hold first place status for a while: a 500-million-year-old fossil from the wonderfully weird group of marine invertebrates, the tunicates.
“This animal is as exciting a discovery as some of the stuff I found when hanging off a cliffside of a mountain, or jumping out of a helicopter. It’s just as cool,” said Nanglu, postdoctoral researcher in the Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology at Harvard University.
In a new study in Nature Communications, Nanglu and coauthors describe the new fossil, ...
2023-07-06
Halide perovskites are a family of materials that have attracted attention for their superior optoelectronic properties and potential applications in devices such as high-performance solar cells, light-emitting diodes, and lasers.
These materials have largely been implemented into thin-film or micron-sized device applications. Precisely integrating these materials at the nanoscale could open up even more remarkable applications, like on-chip light sources, photodetectors, and memristors. However, achieving this integration has remained challenging because this delicate material can be damaged by conventional fabrication and patterning ...
2023-07-06
EMBL’s European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI) has launched the Pathogens Portal – an online platform that enables researchers, clinicians, and policymakers to access the most comprehensive collection of biomolecular data about pathogens. The portal features data spanning over 200,000 pathogen species and strains and is set to become a key tool for infection biology and pathogen surveillance.
The list of pathogens featured in the portal was collated using the UK’s Health and Safety Executive’s ...
2023-07-06
When animals suffer from acute or chronic stress, they produce more hormones causing shifts in the nervous system, immune response, and behavior. Some animals, if they are in the presence of a conspecific, can modulate their response to buffer stress. This is known as social buffering.
There is some research suggesting that snakes can exhibit complex social behavior. Nevertheless, social buffering in reptiles, as well as in other asocial organisms and solitary foragers, hasn’t been studied extensively. Now, researchers in the US have examined if rattlesnakes inhabiting Southern California use social buffering to alleviate acute stress.
“We showed that when ...
2023-07-06
Every year in Belgium, 1,600 people wait for a transplant. Of these, in 2021, only 939 received an organ. Thus more than 40% of patients often have to wait more than a year before hoping to receive a transplant. When a transplant is possible, it is essential to ensure its success so as not to “waste” an organ. One of the keys to successful transplants is an anti-rejection drug, tacrolimus, which patients must take for life. But it is extremely difficult to dose this drug correctly, which can lead to significant risks of transplant failure in the event of underdosing and significant side effects in the event of overdosing (diabetes, hirsutism, hair loss, neuropathy or nephrotoxic ...
2023-07-06
UCL press release
Under embargo until Thursday, 6 July 2023, 00:01 London time
Giant stone artefacts found on rare Ice Age site in Kent
Researchers at the UCL Institute of Archaeology have discovered some of the largest early prehistoric stone tools in Britain.
The excavations, which took place in Kent and were commissioned in advance of development of the Maritime Academy School in Frindsbury, revealed prehistoric artefacts in deep Ice Age sediments preserved on a hillside above the Medway Valley.
The researchers, from UCL Archaeology South-East, discovered 800 stone artefacts thought to be over 300,000 years old, buried in sediments which filled a sinkhole and ...
2023-07-06
UNVERSITY PARK, Pa. — A new type of ferroelectric polymer that is exceptionally good at converting electrical energy into mechanical strain holds promise as a high-performance motion controller or “actuator” with great potential for applications in medical devices, advanced robotics, and precision positioning systems, according to a team of international researchers led by Penn State.
Mechanical strain, how a material changes shape when force is applied, is an important property for an actuator, which is any material that will change or deform when an external force such as electrical energy is applied. Traditionally, these actuator ...
2023-07-06
The Consortium for Additive Manufacturing Research and Education (CAMRE) at the Naval Postgraduate School (NPS) achieved the first successful demonstration of in-flight 3D printing aboard a U.S. Marine Corps MV-22 Osprey tiltrotor aircraft on June 21 in Southern California.
CAMRE’s operational demonstration, which involved the printing of a medical cast aboard an airborne Osprey, was part of larger-scale exercise support provided by CAMRE and the Marine Innovation Unit (MIU) to forces participating in an integrated training exercise (ITX) at Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center Twentynine Palms, Calif., from June 10-22.
This successful test of in-flight ...
2023-07-06
The time of year when eggs are collected from women’s ovaries during fertility treatment makes a difference to live birth rates, according to new research published today (Thursday) in Human Reproduction [1], one of the world’s leading reproductive medicine journals.
Researchers in Australia have found that transferring frozen then thawed embryos to women’s wombs from eggs collected in the summer resulted in a 30% higher likelihood of babies born alive, than if the eggs had been retrieved in the autumn.
Dr Sebastian Leathersich, an obstetrician, gynaecologist and Fellow in Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility at Fertility Specialists of Western Australia, ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Rice U.’s Songtao Chen wins NSF CAREER Award
Research seeks to leverage point defects in silicon to advance quantum communication and computing