Lukasz Komza is a Physics PhD student at the University of California, Berkeley. He started working with Alp Sipahigil in the Quantum Devices Group in 2021 on the characterization and integration of quantum emitters in silicon photonics. Prior to starting his PhD, Lukasz interned at Bell Labs in Murray Hill, NJ, working with Michael Eggleston on optical coherence tomography. He studied quantum light sources in 2D materials with Stefan Strauf during his undergraduate education, where he received the Alfred M. Mayer prize.
Research
Silicon is the ideal material for building electronic and photonic circuits at scale. Spin qubits and integrated photonic quantum technologies in silicon offer a promising path to scaling by leveraging advanced semiconductor manufacturing and integration capabilities. However, the lack of deterministic quantum light sources, two-photon gates, and spin-photon interfaces in silicon poses a major challenge to scalability. Lukasz’s research focuses on studying quantum emitters in silicon, and using them to address these challenges. Lukasz is integrating these quantum emitters in silicon photonics devices, and is working to improve their optical and spin coherences with device engineering.