Pushing the limits of CMOS optical parametric amplifiers with USRN:Si7N3 above the two-photon absorption edge

CMOS platforms operating at the telecommunications wavelength either reside within the highly dissipative two-photon regime in silicon-based optical devices, or possess small nonlinearities. Bandgap engineering of non-stoichiometric silicon nitride using state-of-the-art fabrication techniques has l...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ooi, K. J. A., Ng, D. K. T., Wang, T., Chee, A. K. L., Ng, S. K., Wang, Q., Ang, L. K., Tan, D. T. H., Agarwal, Anuradha, Kimerling, Lionel C
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Materials Processing Center
Format: Article
Language:en_US
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2017
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/110129
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3913-6189
Description
Summary:CMOS platforms operating at the telecommunications wavelength either reside within the highly dissipative two-photon regime in silicon-based optical devices, or possess small nonlinearities. Bandgap engineering of non-stoichiometric silicon nitride using state-of-the-art fabrication techniques has led to our development of USRN (ultra-silicon-rich nitride) in the form of Si[subscript 7]N[subscript 3], that possesses a high Kerr nonlinearity (2.8 × 10[superscript −13] cm[superscript 2] W[superscript −1]), an order of magnitude larger than that in stoichiometric silicon nitride. Here we experimentally demonstrate high-gain optical parametric amplification using USRN, which is compositionally tailored such that the 1,550 nm wavelength resides above the two-photon absorption edge, while still possessing large nonlinearities. Optical parametric gain of 42.5 dB, as well as cascaded four-wave mixing with gain down to the third idler is observed and attributed to the high photon efficiency achieved through operating above the two-photon absorption edge, representing one of the largest optical parametric gains to date on a CMOS platform.