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1.INTRODUCTIONArrays of SPADs implemented in standard CMOS technology are a relatively recent development in single-photon detection. With respect to other technologies such Photo-Multiplier Tubes (PMT) and Silicon Photo-Multipliers (SiPM), CMOS SPAD arrays provide spatial resolving capabilities at high resolution in addition to sub-nanosecond temporally resolving capabilities. For this reason, they represent a valid alternative to Electron-Multiplying CCDs (EMCCD). So far, CMOS SPAD technology has been applied (i) in biology for Fluorescence Lifetime Imaging Microscopy (FLIM) [1] and Raman Spectroscopy [2]; (ii) in the medical field for Positron Emission Tomography (PET) [3]; (iii) in the industrial/automotive/space domains for 3D Time-of-Flight (3D ToF) measurements [4, 5, 6]; and (iv) in cryptography for Quantum Random Number Generation (QRNG) [7]. Recently, CMOS SPAD consumer products entered the market as Light Detection And Ranging (LiDAR) devices for smartphone camera autofocusing [8]. The technology has evolved through the years, and it is now mature for being adopted in quantum physics experiments to optimize setups and enable new types of investigation. In particular, quantum physics experiments require high spatial resolution, high sensitivity in the visible range up to the Near Infra-Red (NIR) region, sub-100ps time resolution, low dark count rates (DCR), negligible crosstalk and usability. SUPERTWIN [9] is a project funded by the European Commission within the Horizon 2020 programme that involves the development of a new concept of quantum microscope employing all solid-state technologies for the generation and recording of entangled photons. The design of SPAD arrays in CMOS technology customized to capture spatio-temporal multi-photon correlation functions is one of the project main goals. This work describes the use of a CMOS SPAD array for measurement of the spatial second-order correlation function of entangled two-photon states in the far field. The sensor that has been used in this experiment is the SPADnet-I sensor, an 8×16 pixel SPAD-based CMOS imager [3]. The experiment shows the technology strengths and weaknesses. A roadmap towards the development of high-resolution CMOS quantum image sensors for quantum optics applications is then provided. The remainder of the paper is organized as follows. We provide an overview on state-of-the-art of SPAD arrays implemented in CMOS technology in Sec. 2. We describe the experiment in Sec. 3, summarizing the architecture and performance of the SPADnet-I sensor, along with the description of the optical setup and the results of the experiment. The effect of crosstalk in the SPADnet-I sensor is analyzed in Sec. 4. Finally, we provide a projection on the next generation of CMOS SPAD arrays for quantum optics imagers in Sec. 5. 2.STATE OF THE ART IN CMOS SPAD ARRAYSThe state-of-the-art in terms of spatial resolution for a SPAD-based sensor is represented by [10] that reports a QVGA 8-μm pixel pitch with 26.8% fill factor (FF). However its time-resolving performance is in the order of nanoseconds and not fully reported yet while the sensor frame rate is of 16 kfps. [1] reports a time-gated 512×128-pixel imager fabricated in standard high-voltage 0.35µm CMOS technology. The pixels of 24µm pitch include a SPAD and its front-end and the electronics required for time gating and a 1-bit memory to store the acquired data (photon detected or not detected). The sensor achieves a pixel FF of 5% and a maximum frame rate of 156kfps. The minimum gating width is 4ns. The sensor has been applied to fluorescence lifetime imaging applications and as a true random number generator. In [11], authors characterize a linear 256×2-pixel sensor fabricated in standard 130nm CMOS process in a testbed for application in time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy. Each pixel contains four time-gated SPADs and a Time-to-Digital Converter (TDC) that records the SPAD triggering time with 40ps resolution. The electronics fits in an area of 23.78×100µm2, achieving a 43.7% FF. In addition, the chip includes the circuitry to perform per-pixel Time-Correlated Single-Photon Counting (TCSPC) with 320ps binning and center of mass calculation. The line rate of the sensor in TCSPC mode is 200Hz. The sensor total jitter is 700ps FWHM. Direct Time-of-Flight (ToF) 3D imaging is another popular application of CMOS SPAD arrays. In [4], a fully digital 32×32-pixel imager fabricated in 0.35µm automotive certified process is presented. Each 150×150µm2, 3.14% FF pixel can operate in photon-counting mode or photon-timestamping mode, employing 310ps TDCs. A state-of-the-art DCR density of 0.17Hz/µm2 is reported, too. Frames are acquired at up to 100kfps. The sensor timing performance in terms of jitter is of ~600ps FWHM. Another ToF sensor in high-voltage 0.35µm standard CMOS technology has been presented in [5]. It consists of a 9×9 matrix of SPADs having a >40% FF. A 3×3 subset of SPADs is enabled at a time and coupled to an array of high-performance (<10ps binning) TDCs, which can be read out at a rate of few MHz. The timing resolution is of 170ps FWHM. A 320×240 array of SPAD-based is reported in [10] for time-gated photon counting applications. The pixel pitch is of 8µm and achieves a 26.8% FF. Binary images are acquired at a rate of 16kfps, while timing performance is not reported. These SPAD-based sensors are good potential candidates for coincidence detection of spatially correlated photon pairs, however, they suffer from very low fill factors [1, 4], time-coincidence detection capability longer than 0.6ns [1, 11, 4], acquisition frame rates below 160kHz [1, 11, 4, 5], limited spatial resolution of the 2D pixel array arrangement [1, 11]. The trend in CMOS SPAD-array design goes towards:
3.EXPERIMENTWe conducted a preliminary study consisting in the acquisition with an existing SPAD-based imager of the second-order correlation patterns in the far-field of a flux of entangled photons. SPADnet-I sensor is the sensor of choice for the experiment. It is a fully digital single-photon imager implemented in a 130nm CMOS process. It comprises an array of 8×16 pixels, and is fully synchronous with a global clock that defines the sampling frequency. Each pixel of 610.5×571.2µm2 area includes an array of 24×30 SPADs whose outputs are digitized and merged into a single train of pulses which is fed to the pixel back-end logic. The back-end logic consists of digital counters, that count the number of photons within a clock bin, and TDCs, that record the time arrival of the first photon detected within a clock bin. The sensor can operate at up to 100MHz. A micrograph of the chip is shown in Figure 1(a). The sensor has been specifically designed for Positron Emission Tomography applications, and implements a number of additional features tailored for those purposes. Nevertheless, it includes several unique characteristics that make it suitable for quantum optics experiments, including (i) high pixel FF (42.6%); (ii) per-pixel photon timestamping capabilities with 65ps resolution, 265ps jitter; (iii) high frame rate (up to 750kfps); and (iv) the capability to turn on/off SPADs individually, e.g., to calibrate the sensor and increase SNR by enabling only low noise devices. Figure 1(b) shows the acquisition timing applied in the quantum physics experiment. In this context, each SPADnet-I pixel captures one photon timestamp for two consecutive 10ns time bins before transmitting data to the external controller. The sensor readout takes less than 4µs for the whole chip. In the experiment, a non-linear crystal pumped with a continuous wave laser generates transverse momentum entangled photon pairs by means of Spontaneous Parametric Down-Conversion (SPDC). Under certain conditions, the photons are expected to exit the crystal with an angle with respect to the longitudinal axis, as shown in Figure 2. The experiment aims to record the spatial second-order correlation function in the far field. Figure 3 shows the principle of two optical setups. Figure 3(a) describes the standard PMT- or SiPM-based approach, in which the spatial second-order correlation function is obtained by means of a 2D scan of the photon beam using two single-channel photodetectors; in Figure 3(b) the same measurement is performed by means of a CMOS SPAD-based imager. The setup employs a 33mW, 405nm laser to pump the non-linear crystal. The temperature of the latter is chosen such that the entangled photons exit the crystal in a non-collinear configuration (see Figure 2). A set of filters is then used to remove the residual of the pumping laser and let only the pairs of entangled photons at 810nm±5nm pass. A 50:50 beam splitter separates the beam into two beams. Typically, the two beams are coupled to optical fibers and provided as inputs to two single- channel single-photon detectors, as in Figure 3(a). A 2D scan for the each of the channel is then required to fully characterize the photon flux, resulting in an N4 number of acquisition steps, where N2 is the resolution of the output image. In Figure 3(b) the scanning mechanism and the single- photon detectors have been replaced by the SPADnet-I CMOS SPAD-based imager, capable of recording the arrival time of the detected photons individually for each pixel/channel. To improve signal-to-noise ratio, 50% of the highest DCR SPADs have been disabled. On top of this, a ring of two-rows and two columns of dead SPADs have been created at the boundary of each pixel to reduce crosstalk at the expense of lowering the FF. The experimental outcome is shown in Figure 3(c) and Figure 4. Figure 3(c) shows the first-order correlation function G(1)(ρ), extracted from the SPADnet-I sensor measurements simply accumulating three million acquisitions of 10ns each. The uniform background is due to dark counts. The projection of the two split uniform background noise. In Figure 4(a), the photon arrival times recorded by the sensor have been processed to extract coincidence events and calculate the second-order correlation function G(2) (ρs,ρi). The sensor 2D coordinates have been linearized to display on each of the plot axis all the possible 1282 correlation points in a single graph. Pixel anti-correlations are visible along the NW-SE diagonal. On the opposite diagonal, lines represent false correlations attributed to crosstalk events, mostly visible at a distance of 16 pixels (i.e., one row). Figure 4(b) shows the second-order correlation function G(2)(ρ+), defined as: The plot highlights three anti-correlation points corresponding to each of the three possible outcomes of the beam splitting stage, namely (i) both the photons being transmitted (right), (ii) both being reflected (left), and (iii) one transmitted, one reflected (central anti-correlation point). It is worth mentioning that using the setup depicted in Figure 3(a), only the central anti-correlation point would be observed. Moreover, as the SPAD sensor generated a 2D pixel map of photon arrival times, we could also remove the beam splitter and directly focus the beam onto the sensor focal plane. As in this experiment crosstalk-induced correlations behave differently with respect to the desired anticorrelations, they can be easily filtered out to produce a better anti-correlation plot. This is not true in general, though. For example, in a similar experiment in the near field, crosstalk events would not be distinguishable from the actual signal, and they would appear as artifacts on the processed image. 4.CROSSTALK ANALYSIS IN THE SPADNET-I SENSORIn order to have a better picture of the crosstalk problem in SPADnet-I, a large number of frames have been acquired in complete darkness. In this condition, all recorded events represent dark counts or crosstalk events. A histogram of time differences between any possible combinations of events recorded in the same frame has been generated. As dark counts are uncorrelated events, we do expect a uniform distribution of timestamps within a clock bin for every pixel. The histogram of time differences should then exhibit a triangular shape peaked at 0, given by the convolution of two uniform distributions. Figure 5 shows the actual histogram obtained after many acquisitions. On top of the expected triangular shape, a peak at small time differences is observed. Clearly, this behavior is ascribed to crosstalk and can be analyzed by looking at spatial correlations. Spatial correlations have been calculated dividing the whole data into two sets, one corresponding to all couples with a difference in TDC code smaller than or equal to 0 (here referred to as the “peak” dataset), that includes dark counts and crosstalk events, the other with the remaining couples, containing dark counts only (“tails” dataset). From the “tails” dataset, a pyramidal distribution is obtained in Figure 6(a), as result of the 2D convolution of two uniform distributions. This is expected since dark counts are uniformly distributed across the pixels. The linear behavior is confirmed in Figure 6(b), showing the cross sections at ΔX=0 and ΔY=0. The “peak” data set exhibits a more-than-linear behavior in Figure 6(c). Such a crosstalk-induced distortion has a larger impact as the spatial difference approaches zero. Figure 6(d) shows the cross sections at ΔX=0 and ΔY=0 along with the ideal linear behavior interpolated from the data in Figure 6(b) (dotted line), corresponding to a crosstalk-free sensor. Figure 6(e) and Figure 6(f) show the spatial correlations due to crosstalk only, obtained by subtracting Figure 6(a) from Figure 6(c), after proper normalizations. Crosstalk has a significant impact even at large distances. Residual spatial correlations are non-zero at up to ΔX =4 and ΔY = 4, i.e., at more than 1mm distance. These values are surprisingly large if compared with other crosstalk studies [12]. This behavior can be ascribed to the presence of a glass carrier on top of the chip as typically required for Through Silicon Vias manufacturing and to the hot-carrier induced photon emission effect. Some of the emitted photons may exit the Silicon and reach distant pixels because of multiple reflections on the top glass. 5.TOWARDS A NEW GENERATION OF SPAD-BASED IMAGERS FOR QUANTUM OPTICS APPLICATIONSSUPERTWIN aims at the development of a new all solid-state microscopy technique that exploits N-partite photonic states to achieve super-resolution. SPAD-based imaging has been selected as the most promising technology to measure the spatial correlation patterns of the entangled photon back-scattered from the target object. A list of specifications for the imager include: (i) ≥ 256×256-pixel spatial resolution; (ii) temporal resolving capabilities with a resolution in the order of 100ps; (iii) acquire data at a very high frame rate, synchronized with an external reference signal, e.g. a laser trigger running at 10MHz; (iv) high sensitivity up to the near infra-red region of the spectrum, low dark count rates and negligible crosstalk; (v) ease of use and integration. There is no market product, nor research work that fully satisfies these requirements. SUPERTWIN aims to develop a new imaging platform optimized for quantum physics experiments. For state-of-the-art works, the size of each channel (called pixel) ranges from about 100µm down to 10µm, with a decreasing trend as the technology evolves. The advantages of smaller pixels include (i) lower DCR, and (ii) better SPAD timing performance, since the capacitance reduces with the area. Pixels can be arranged in 2D arrays of sizes ranging from thousands up to almost 100,000 elements in most recent developments. Efforts have been spent at manufacturing technology level to optimize the sensitivity and the noise performance. Recent results show a photon detection probability larger than 20% at 810nm, larger than 10% at 950nm, by means of a customized CMOS process [13]. This is typically achieved at the expense of poorer timing performance. With fully standard CMOS processes, the photon detection efficiency at those wavelengths is in the order of few percent, with a DCR density that can be as low as 0.17 Hz/μm2. Crosstalk is still a concern, as it creates spatially correlated artifacts in the measurement [12]. At the time of writing, the first SUPERTWIN SPAD imager design has been submitted for fabrication in fully standard 150nm CMOS process provided by LFoundry. The chip includes three different architectures that target the SUPERTWIN specifications. A first architecture is based on area-efficient TDCs, which represent a robust solution for recording the photon arrival times. A second architecture is based on the TDC analog counterpart, called Time-to-Analog Converter [14], which typically leads to more compact and energy efficient solutions at the expense of larger mismatches across the array. Both the two architectures implement a data compression scheme to reduce da data rate and increase the frame rate. A third, timestamp-less architecture aims to monitor the global photon activity and freeze the SPAD status if a number of photons have been detected simultaneously. The main advantage is the reduced amount of data being transmitted. All the three architectures have <50µm pixel pitch, thus enabling the implementation of 256×256 resolution imagers. According to the design, a >20% pixel FF is obtained in all the architectures. 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