NANOPHOTONICS

The journal Nanophotonics publishes innovative research results, specific developments in the field and novel applications in the field of light matter interactions at the nanoscale. It is published in partnership with Sciencewise.

Journal Impact Factor: 6.5 5-year Journal Impact Factor: 7.4 CiteScore: 13.5

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Celebrating the International Year of Quantum Science

and Technology!

100 Years of Quantum Science and Technology

The United Nations has declared 2025 the International Year of Quantum Science and Technology to mark a century since the initial development of quantum mechanics.

Quantum science has profoundly impacted the world, continuously revolutionizing technologies such as quantum computing, quantum cryptography, and quantum sensors, shaping the future of computing, security, medicine, and beyond.

Throughout 2025, we’ll share a monthly collection of articles in the field of quantum science.

QUANTUM VOICES

We caught up with Nanophotonics Managing Editor, Antonio I. Fernández-Domínguez, Associate Professor at the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid whose research focuses on the theoretical investigation of quantum nanophotonic phenomena. He shares how nanophotonics plays a key role in advancing quantum technologies.

What first interested you in the field of physics? What excited you about it?

Since I was very young, I knew I wanted to study physics. I was probably attracted by the power and accuracy of mathematical expressions to describe the physical world about us. My interest began with tv programs such as Cosmos or the Mechanical Universe, later deepened through popular science books. Naturally, my interest started with classical mechanics, because it relates to the world I could perceive, but during the undergraduate courses, I quickly felt that electrodynamics was my favourite area. Probably, I liked the complexity of electromagnetic phenomena in space and time, and their description by means of vector fields, spatial operators and differential equations. I never approached physics from a philosophical perspective, it was more of a natural curiosity that pulled me in.

What is your current research focus?

In my bio, I usually write that my research focuses on theoretical electromagnetics and quantum nanophotonics, but I’m always open to exploring other related areas. My PhD and postdoctoral work were mainly in classical electromagnetics, but over time, I’ve gradually shifted toward the quantum regime, where single photons matter. Recently, I have been particularly focused on quantum phenomena involving photon-assisted interactions between quantum emitters. Despite this natural shift on the theory side, I have made a determined effort to stay connected with classical nanophotonics experiments. Thanks to this, in just the past few years, I’ve had the chance to learn about a range of topics, such as DNA origami, thermal nonlinearities, and STM electroluminescence, to name a few.

How important is quantum science and technology in everyday life?

Nature is quantum at the microscopic level, and thus, quantum principles underlie the entire natural world we experience. For decades, we've benefited from technologies where the quantum nature of matter and light plays a key role. Examples include lasers, microelectronic components, and MRI scanners. However, it is only more recently that quantum phenomena have been deliberately exploited as a technological resource. One of the most relevant examples is quantum cryptography, particularly quantum key distribution, which leverages the non-deterministic character of quantum mechanics to enable secure communication. This is no longer a futuristic idea, it is already a working technology, with a steadily growing market in recent years.

How is nanophotonics helping to push the boundaries of quantum technologies?

Photonics is a crucial enabling resource for quantum technology. Photons, with energies ranging from the GHz to the visible in the electromagnetic spectrum, are integral to almost all quantum technology platforms developed so far, from superconducting qubits to trapped Rydberg atoms. Due to their compatibility with electronic technology and its miniaturization potential, attention has focused lately on solid-state systems, where electron spins, vacancy centres or quantum dots play the role of qubits, whose interactions are assisted by photons. Importantly, photons themselves can also function as flying qubits, exploiting properties such as polarization or propagation path. Nanophotonics—centered on pushing the limits of spatial light manipulation and concentration, even beyond the subwavelength scale—has naturally emerged as a key resource in this context.

What is the most impactful breakthrough you have seen in quantum over your career?

That's a difficult question to answer. Letting myself be guided by the novelty of recent developments, I would highlight the progress made in recent years by various companies and academic institutions in scaling up quantum hardware and improving error control and correction in systems with an increasing number of qubits. The real challenges, both intellectual and technical, of quantum technologies do not lie within quantum mechanics itself, which this 2025 becomes a century old, but rather at its interface with the macroscopic world we humans inhabit. Achieving isolation and preserving properties such as quantum coherence and entanglement across a growing number of operations involving multiple elements while being able to initialize and read them under real-world conditions, with temperature, noise, and many sources of decoherence, remains the greatest quest. That is why I consider these recent steps along this line to be the most significant.

How do you see quantum evolving in the next decade, and what breakthroughs might we expect?

I will deliberately avoid making predictions about the short-term future of quantum technologies, as they are likely to enter (they have already) an area beyond my expertise: the development and commercialization of applications based on them. However, I do believe that in the coming years, the way quantum mechanics is introduced in undergraduate physics programs (and similar fields) will change significantly. This is something I have recently discussed with my colleagues, and steps in this direction have already been taken in some universities. For many generations, students, after acquiring a deep understanding of various areas of classical physics (such as mechanics and electromagnetism), would approach quantum mechanics through atomic physics—the field where quantum coherence, which gives rise to phenomena so distinct from the classical world, manifests most clearly and distinctly. I believe this approach has been driven by historical reasons. I am convinced, however, that this will change in the coming years, with quantum mechanics being introduced (at least partially) from the perspective of open quantum systems, establishing the connection between classical (macroscopic) and quantum (microscopic) physics, thus avoiding the intellectually challenging leap students have had to make for so long. This shift will also offer students a practical perspective on the field, which will be crucial for training professionals with the optimal background for quantum engineering.

RECOMMENDED READING LIST

Read articles selected by Antonio I. Fernández-Domínguez

Nanowire-based integrated photonics for quantum information and quantum sensing

Jin Chang, Jun Gao , Iman Esmaeil Zadeh , Ali W. Elshaari and Val Zwiller

Sensing with quantum light: a perspective

Animesh Datta

Improving quantum metrology protocols with programmable photonic circuits

Alberto Muñoz de las Heras, Diego Porras and Alejandro González-Tudela

Large-scale quantum photonic circuits in silicon

Nicholas C. Harris, Darius Bunandar, Mihir Pant, Greg R. Steinbrecher, Jacob Mower, Mihika Prabhu, Tom Baehr-Jones, Michael Hochberg and Dirk Englund

Coherent nonlinear optics of quantum emitters in nanophotonic waveguides

Pierre Türschmann, Hanna Le Jeannic, Signe F. Simonsen, Harald R. Haakh, Stephan Götzinger, Vahid Sandoghdar, Peter Lodahl and Nir Rotenberg

A fiber-pigtailed quantum dot device generating indistinguishable photons at GHz clock-rates

Lucas Rickert, Kinga Żołnacz, Daniel A. Vajner, Martin von Helversen, Sven Rodt, Stephan Reitzenstein, Hanqing Liu, Shulun Li, Haiqiao Ni, Paweł Wyborski, Grzegorz Sęk, Anna Musiał, Zhichuan Niu and Tobias Heindel

THE MAY ARTICLE COLLECTION

All-optical control of charge-trapping defects in rare-earth doped oxides

Leonardo V. S. França, Shaan Doshi, Haitao Zhang and Tian Zhong

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Quantum efficiency of the B-center in hexagonal boron nitride

Karin Yamamura, Nathan Coste, Helen Zhi Jie Zeng, Milos Toth, Mehran Kianinia and Igor Aharonovich

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Single-photon emitters in PECVD-grown silicon nitride films: from material growth to photophysical properties

Zachariah O. Martin, Alexander Senichev, Pranshu Maan, Mustafa G. Ozlu, Miroslava Marinova, Zhongxia Shang, Alexei Lagutchev, Alexandra Boltasseva and Vladimir M. Shalaev

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Second-harmonic radiation by on-chip integrable mirror-symmetric nanodimers with sub-nanometric plasmonic gap

Junzheng Hu, Xiaofei Ye, Hui Huang, Guangxu Su, Zhekai Lv, Zhaofu Qin, Pan Hu, Fanxin Liu, Wei Wu and Peng Zhan

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Collective single-photon emission and energy transfer in thin-layer dielectric and plasmonic systems

Mads A. Jørgensen, Devashish Pandey, Ehsan Amooghorban, Sanshui Xiao, Nicolas Stenger and Martijn Wubs

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Electro-optic frequency shift of single photons from a quantum dot

Sanjay Kapoor, Aleksander Rodek, Michał Mikołajczyk, Jerzy Szuniewicz, Filip Sośnicki, Tomasz Kazimierczuk, Piotr Kossacki and Michał Karpiński

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Low-dimensional solid-state single-photon emitters

Jinli Chen, Chaohan Cui, Ben Lawrie, Yongzhou Xue, Saikat Guha, Matt Eichenfield, Huan Zhao and Xiaodong Yan

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Building photonic links for microwave quantum processors

Han Zhao

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Sensing with quantum light: a perspective

Animesh Datta

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NEWS AND UPDATES

THE NANOPHOTONICS EARLY CAREER AWARD


Nanophotonics is proud to support the work of early-career researchers who have made outstanding contributions to advancements in nano-optics and photonics. Every year, we recognize the achievements of four early-career scientists in nanophotonics through our annual awards. Each winner receives a prize of 1,000 EUR and a waiver to publish their work in Nanophotonics at no cost.

Nominations for the 2025 awards will open soon!

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THE PHOTONICS INNOVATION AWARD IN HONOR OF FEDERICO CAPASSO


The Photonics Innovation Award is named after the founding editor, Federico Capasso, Robert L. Wallace Professor of Applied Physics and Vinton Hayes Senior Research Fellow in Electrical Engineering at Harvard University, has been established to recognize scientists who are leading the way in science and technology.

The winners of this award will receive a certificate, a trophy and a prize of 4,000 EUR.

Nominations are now closed, and the winner will be announced on 24th June 2025.

READ OUR RECENTLY PUBLISHED SPECIAL ISSUES


Current Trends in Nanophotonics

Volume 13, Issue 25 (2024)

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New Frontiers in Nonlinear Nanophotonics

Volume 13, Issue 18 (2024)

READ THE ISSUE

Strong Coupling of Organic Molecules

Volume 13, Issue 14 (2024)

READ THE ISSUE

Programmable Nano-optics and Photonics

Volume 13, Issue 12 (2024)

READ THE ISSUE

Nanophotonics out of Equilibrium

Volume 13, Issue 11 (2024)

READ THE ISSUE

Infrared and Terahertz Quantum Technologies

Volume 13, Issue 10 (2024)

READ THE ISSUE

Metamaterials and Plasmonics in Asia

Volume 13, Issue 8 (2024)

READ THE ISSUE

New Frontiers of Nanophotonics through Metamaterials, Photonic Crystals, and Plasmonics

Volume 13, Issue 7 (2024)

READ THE ISSUE

Thermal Photonics for Sustainability

Volume 13, Issue 5 (2024)

READ THE ISSUE

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