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Extending the spectrum of fully integrated photonics to submicrometre wavelengths

Authors :
Minh A. Tran
Chong Zhang
Theodore J. Morin
Lin Chang
Sabyasachi Barik
Zhiquan Yuan
Woonghee Lee
Glenn Kim
Aditya Malik
Zeyu Zhang
Joel Guo
Heming Wang
Boqiang Shen
Lue Wu
Kerry Vahala
John E. Bowers
Hyundai Park
Tin Komljenovic
Source :
Nature, vol 610, iss 7930
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Integrated photonics has profoundly affected a wide range of technologies underpinning modern society1–4. The ability to fabricate a complete optical system on a chip offers unrivalled scalability, weight, cost and power efficiency5,6. Over the last decade, the progression from pure III–V materials platforms to silicon photonics has significantly broadened the scope of integrated photonics, by combining integrated lasers with the high-volume, advanced fabrication capabilities of the commercial electronics industry7,8. Yet, despite remarkable manufacturing advantages, reliance on silicon-based waveguides currently limits the spectral window available to photonic integrated circuits (PICs). Here, we present a new generation of integrated photonics by directly uniting III–V materials with silicon nitride waveguides on Si wafers. Using this technology, we present a fully integrated PIC at photon energies greater than the bandgap of silicon, demonstrating essential photonic building blocks, including lasers, amplifiers, photodetectors, modulators and passives, all operating at submicrometre wavelengths. Using this platform, we achieve unprecedented coherence and tunability in an integrated laser at short wavelength. Furthermore, by making use of this higher photon energy, we demonstrate superb high-temperature performance and kHz-level fundamental linewidths at elevated temperatures. Given the many potential applications at short wavelengths, the success of this integration strategy unlocks a broad range of new integrated photonics applications.

Details

ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
610
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2d0094bc3d4d590786201f3cc2f33ed2