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Heriot-Watt University

Heriot-Watt University

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1,006 Projects, page 1 of 202
  • Funder: European Commission Project Code: 950402
    Overall Budget: 2,050,760 EURFunder Contribution: 2,050,760 EUR

    Humanity’s reliance on the rapid and free flow of information cannot be understated. Over the last two decades, control over the spectral, temporal, and spatial structure of light has led to a massive increase in optical data transfer rates via signal multiplexing. For example, the simultaneous encoding of information in 84,236 spatial and frequency channels was recently used for achieving a record 10 Petabit/sec data transmission rate. As quantum technologies mature, so will the needs of a quantum infrastructure that relies on the efficient and noise-robust transfer of information. Precise control over the photonic degrees of freedom (DOFs) of space, time, and frequency offer the potential to enable similar breakthroughs for the fields of quantum communication and networking, and in parallel unlock key functionalities for quantum imaging and sensing with light. PIQUaNT will develop methods for the coherent control and measurement of the high-dimensional position-momentum and time-frequency DOFs of a photon, and drive forward the creation of techniques for combating sources of noise that inhibit the long-distance transfer of multi-mode quantum information. PIQUaNT will in turn apply these techniques in demonstrations of noise-resilient, high-capacity entanglement distribution in multiple photonic DOFs over commercially available multi-mode and multi-core fibres. Through the realisation of a prototype entanglement-based high-dimensional quantum communications network, PIQUaNT will serve as a blueprint for the future development of noise-robust quantum information networks that saturate the information carrying capacity of a photon.

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  • Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: 1949696

    The demand for optical transceivers in datacenters is growing at an unprecedented rate due to the rise of video streaming and cloud computing. The push for ever faster transceivers, at lower cost and in ever smaller packages is putting considerable strain on photonic transceiver devices. Key emerging technologies such as silicon photonics and flip chip assembly of integrated optical platforms are being developed to meet future needs. All however require to efficiently interface to fibre and waveguide architectures and provide low cost automated assembly while maintaining accuracy and performance. This project will involve the definition, design, development, fabrication and test of novel glass based photonic coupling structures using combined direct laser write, chemical etching and surface shaping. This is targeted to simplify assembly processes to transceiver platforms, for both Silicon Photonic and VCSEL based architectures, and provide high volume product solutions to meet anticipated future demand. The work will focus on achieving: a) low coupling losses b) relaxed alignment tolerances c) high levels of reliability. The coupling structures will be fabricated at Optoscribe's state of the art clean room fabrication facility in Livingston and activities will span from optically modelling the structures using photonic design tools, to transferring designs into prototype manufacturing, taking the parts through processing, singulation and optical test.

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  • Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/V518426/1
    Funder Contribution: 26,666 GBP

    Doctoral Training Partnerships: a range of postgraduate training is funded by the Research Councils. For information on current funding routes, see the common terminology at https://www.ukri.org/apply-for-funding/how-we-fund-studentships/. Training grants may be to one organisation or to a consortia of research organisations. This portal will show the lead organisation only.

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  • Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: 10033122
    Funder Contribution: 53,595 GBP

    Abstracts are not currently available in GtR for all funded research. This is normally because the abstract was not required at the time of proposal submission, but may be because it included sensitive information such as personal details.

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  • Funder: European Commission Project Code: 236845
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