Abstract

Controlling changes in the optical properties of photonic devices allows photonic integrated circuits (PICs) to perform useful functions, leading to a large breadth of applications in communications, computing, and sensing. Many mechanisms to change optical properties exist, but few allow doing so in a reversible, non-volatile manner. Without such mechanisms, power inefficiencies and use of external memory are inevitable. In this work, we propose and experimentally demonstrate reversible, non-volatile phase actuation of a silicon nitride PIC with thermally stable photochromic organic molecules vapor-deposited within a slot waveguide structure. The use of a high-core-index platform allows the photochemical phase actuation of a planar-resonator-based photonic memory unit, which enables positive and negative signal weighting and permits integrated spectroscopic analysis. We show properties of this all-optical memory for a silicon photonics platform, including low loss in the optical C-band, first-order photokinetics of the photoconversion, bidirectional scalable switching, and continuous tuning. Such features are critical for memories in analog applications such as quantum, microwave, and neuromorphic photonics, where bipolar weights, low loss, and precision are paramount. More generally, this work suggests that back-end-of-line-compatible vapor deposition of organic molecules into silicon photonic circuits is promising to introduce non-silicon-native functionality.

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