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Multi‐level Electro‐thermal Switching of Optical Phase‐Change Materials Using Graphene

Authors :
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Materials Science and Engineering
Lincoln Laboratory
Ríos, Carlos
Zhang, Yifei
Shalaginov, Mikhail Y
Deckoff-Jones, Skylar
Wang, Haozhe
An, Sensong
Zhang, Hualiang
Kang, Myungkoo
Richardson, Kathleen A
Roberts, Christopher
Chou, Jeffrey B
Liberman, Vladimir
Vitale, Steven A
Kong, Jing
Gu, Tian
Hu, Juejun
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Materials Science and Engineering
Lincoln Laboratory
Ríos, Carlos
Zhang, Yifei
Shalaginov, Mikhail Y
Deckoff-Jones, Skylar
Wang, Haozhe
An, Sensong
Zhang, Hualiang
Kang, Myungkoo
Richardson, Kathleen A
Roberts, Christopher
Chou, Jeffrey B
Liberman, Vladimir
Vitale, Steven A
Kong, Jing
Gu, Tian
Hu, Juejun
Source :
Wiley
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Reconfigurable photonic systems featuring minimal power consumption are crucial for integrated optical devices in real-world technology. Current active devices available in foundries, however, use volatile methods to modulate light, requiring a constant supply of power and significant form factors. Essential aspects to overcoming these issues are the development of nonvolatile optical reconfiguration techniques which are compatible with on-chip integration with different photonic platforms and do not disrupt their optical performances. In this paper, a solution is demonstrated using an optoelectronic framework for nonvolatile tunable photonics that employs undoped-graphene microheaters to thermally and reversibly switch the optical phase-change material Ge$_2$Sb$_2$Se$_4$Te$_1$ (GSST). An in-situ Raman spectroscopy method is utilized to demonstrate, in real-time, reversible switching between four different levels of crystallinity. Moreover, a 3D computational model is developed to precisely interpret the switching characteristics, and to quantify the impact of current saturation on power dissipation, thermal diffusion, and switching speed. This model is used to inform the design of nonvolatile active photonic devices; namely, broadband Si$_3$N$_4$ integrated photonic circuits with small form-factor modulators and reconfigurable metasurfaces displaying 2$\pi$ phase coverage through neural-network-designed GSST meta-atoms. This framework will enable scalable, low-loss nonvolatile applications across a diverse range of photonics platforms.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Wiley
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1342475081
Document Type :
Electronic Resource