Abstract

Vertical junction resonant microdisk modulators and switches have been demonstrated with exceptionally low power consumption, low-voltage operation, high-speed, and compact size. This paper reviews the progress of vertical junction microdisk modulators, provides detailed design data, and compares vertical junction performance to lateral junction performance. The use of a vertical junction maximizes the overlap of the depletion region with the optical mode thereby minimizing both the drive voltage and power consumption of a depletion-mode modulator. Further, the vertical junction enables contact to be made from the interior of the resonator and therein a hard outer wall to be formed that minimizes radiation in small diameter resonators, further reducing the capacitance and drive power of the modulator. Initial simple vertical junction modulators using depletion-mode operation demonstrated the first sub-100 fJ/bit silicon modulators. With more intricate doping schemes and through the use of AC-coupled drive signals, 3.5 μm diameter vertical junction microdisk modulators have recently achieved a communications efficiency of 3 fJ/bit, making these modulators the smallest and lowest power modulators demonstrated to date, in any material system. Additionally, the demonstration was performed at 12.5 Gb/s, required a peak-to-peak signal level of only 1 V, and achieved bit-error-rates below 10(-12) without requiring signal pre-emphasis. As an additional benefit to the use of interior contacts, higher-order active filters can be constructed from multiple vertical-junction modulators without interference of the electrodes. Doing so, we demonstrated second-order active high-speed bandpass switches with ~2.5 ns switching speeds, and power penalties of only 0.4 dB. Through the use of vertical junctions in resonant modulators, we have achieved the lowest power consumption, lowest voltage, and smallest silicon modulators demonstrated to date.

Highlights

  • Electrical intra- and inter-chip communication links have been the standard communication method between CMOS circuits since their inception

  • An additional benefit of vertical coupled devices is that the use of center contacts enables high-order active filters to be readily created by coupling multiple microdisk modulators

  • In our lowest power devices, we achieved a communications efficiency of 3fJ/bit, a result made possible by the optimized overlap of a vertical junction device

Read more

Summary

Exascale Computing Study

Technology Challenges in Achieving Exascale Systems, P. “Micrometre-scale silicon electro-optic modulator,” Nature 435(7040), 325–327 (2005). L. Lentine, “Ultralow power silicon microdisk modulators and switches,” in Proc. “Low Vpp, ultralow-energy, compact, high-speed silicon electro-optic modulator,” Opt. Express 17(25), 22484–22490 (2009). L. Lentine, “Low-Power High-Speed Silicon Microdisk Modulators,” in Proc. “High-speed and compact silicon modulator based on a racetrack resonator with a 1 V drive voltage,” Opt. Lett. Lipson, “Integrated GHz silicon photonic interconnect with micrometer-scale modulators and detectors,” Opt. Express 17(17), 15248–15256 (2009). “A high-speed silicon optical modulator based on a metal-oxide-semiconductor capacitor,” Nature 427(6975), 615–618 (2004). “High-speed optical modulation based on carrier depletion in a silicon waveguide,” Opt. Express 15(2), 660–668 (2007). L. Lentine, “Low voltage, compact, depletionmode, silicon Mach-Zehnder modulator,” IEEE J. “High-speed 2×2 switch for multiwavelength silicon-photonic networks–on-chip,” J.

Introduction
The Case for Vertical Junction Modulators
A Simple Vertical Junction Modulator
Fabrication and Experimental Results
An Advanced Microdisk Design Driven by an AC Signal
A High-Speed Bandpass Switch
Conclusions
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.