Abstract

Monolithic optoelectronic integration based on a single material is a major pursuit in the fields of nanophotonics and nanoelectronics in order to meet the requirements of future fiber-optic telecommunication systems and on-chip optical interconnection systems. However, the incompatibility between silicon-based electronics and germanium or compound semiconductor-based photonics makes it very challenging to realize optoelectronic integration based on a single material. Here, the integration between silicon waveguides and a carbon nanotube (CNT) optoelectronic system is demonstrated. Waveguide-integrated photodetectors based on the CNT exhibit 12.5 mA/W photoresponsivity at 1530 nm, which presents an improvement of 97.6 times enhanced absorption efficiency compared to that without the waveguide. Multiplied output signals of cascading photodetectors are used to control the output of CNT-based logic gates, thereby demonstrating that the CNT-based optoelectronic integration system is compatible with silicon photonics. Our work indicates that carbon nanotubes have the potential for future integration between nanophotonics and nanoelectronics on a single chip.

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