Development of hybrid/active/passive silicon photonics for future technologies

As a corollary of silicon manufacturing, silicon photonics has emerged as a viable photonic platform that has attracted the attention of many. The commercialization efforts of this technology, however, have remain somewhat limited due to several obstacles, technical and cost-related. As silicon is a...

Πλήρης περιγραφή

Λεπτομέρειες βιβλιογραφικής εγγραφής
Κύριος συγγραφέας: Sia, Brian Jia Xu
Άλλοι συγγραφείς: Wang Hong
Μορφή: Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
Γλώσσα:English
Έκδοση: Nanyang Technological University 2021
Θέματα:
Διαθέσιμο Online:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146497
_version_ 1826121361207066624
author Sia, Brian Jia Xu
author2 Wang Hong
author_facet Wang Hong
Sia, Brian Jia Xu
author_sort Sia, Brian Jia Xu
collection NTU
description As a corollary of silicon manufacturing, silicon photonics has emerged as a viable photonic platform that has attracted the attention of many. The commercialization efforts of this technology, however, have remain somewhat limited due to several obstacles, technical and cost-related. As silicon is a poor emitter of light, the realization of an electrically-pumped monolithic laser source is unlikely. However, one may argue that the above have been satisfactorily resolved with the hybrid/heterogenous Ⅲ-Ⅴ/silicon photonic platform. In fact, the poor electro-optic conversion of silicon is one of the main factor that enables high performance hybrid/heterogenous Ⅲ-Ⅴ/silicon photonic laser diodes, resulting in significant improvement in performance over its Ⅲ-Ⅴ counterparts. While silicon photonics promises low cost, the premise is that the economies of silicon manufacturing is exploited. The inception of silicon photonics is mainly driven by the “interconnect bottleneck” in telecom and datacom. The data center transceiver market is attractive. However, there is a lack of a singular solution to all requirements in terms of reach, multisource agreement and standards. This implies that the cost of developing silicon photonics technology will be high unless the optical industry makes a concerted effort for standardization. As of now, the volumes required by silicon photonics are too low to draw commitment from large chip-making foundries. This work posits that for silicon photonics to be commercially viable, its range of applications must be widespread. The greater the adoption of silicon photonics in industry, the lower its cost. The condition is that firms must make the first step towards choosing silicon photonics for their applications. This work focuses on the development of silicon photonics technology beyond the traditional O and C bands. As a proof of concept to the broadband properties of the silicon-on-insulator platform, a high-performance arbitrary power splitter is realized at the longer transparency edge. In regard to the 2 μm waveband, which has been touted as a potential window for optical communications, the active Si-SiN multilayer platform, silicon switching as well as hybrid Ⅲ- Ⅴ/silicon photonic tunable lasers operating from 1881-1947, 1955-1992 nm has been demonstrated for the first time. In addition, at the application-rich wavelength region near 1.65 µm, a sub-kHz linewidth, hybrid Ⅲ-Ⅴ/silicon photonic tunable laser with a range of 1647-1690 nm is reported.
first_indexed 2024-10-01T05:31:05Z
format Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
id ntu-10356/146497
institution Nanyang Technological University
language English
last_indexed 2024-10-01T05:31:05Z
publishDate 2021
publisher Nanyang Technological University
record_format dspace
spelling ntu-10356/1464972023-07-04T17:23:43Z Development of hybrid/active/passive silicon photonics for future technologies Sia, Brian Jia Xu Wang Hong School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering Centre for Micro-/Nano-electronics (NOVITAS) EWANGHONG@ntu.edu.sg Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering::Optics, optoelectronics, photonics As a corollary of silicon manufacturing, silicon photonics has emerged as a viable photonic platform that has attracted the attention of many. The commercialization efforts of this technology, however, have remain somewhat limited due to several obstacles, technical and cost-related. As silicon is a poor emitter of light, the realization of an electrically-pumped monolithic laser source is unlikely. However, one may argue that the above have been satisfactorily resolved with the hybrid/heterogenous Ⅲ-Ⅴ/silicon photonic platform. In fact, the poor electro-optic conversion of silicon is one of the main factor that enables high performance hybrid/heterogenous Ⅲ-Ⅴ/silicon photonic laser diodes, resulting in significant improvement in performance over its Ⅲ-Ⅴ counterparts. While silicon photonics promises low cost, the premise is that the economies of silicon manufacturing is exploited. The inception of silicon photonics is mainly driven by the “interconnect bottleneck” in telecom and datacom. The data center transceiver market is attractive. However, there is a lack of a singular solution to all requirements in terms of reach, multisource agreement and standards. This implies that the cost of developing silicon photonics technology will be high unless the optical industry makes a concerted effort for standardization. As of now, the volumes required by silicon photonics are too low to draw commitment from large chip-making foundries. This work posits that for silicon photonics to be commercially viable, its range of applications must be widespread. The greater the adoption of silicon photonics in industry, the lower its cost. The condition is that firms must make the first step towards choosing silicon photonics for their applications. This work focuses on the development of silicon photonics technology beyond the traditional O and C bands. As a proof of concept to the broadband properties of the silicon-on-insulator platform, a high-performance arbitrary power splitter is realized at the longer transparency edge. In regard to the 2 μm waveband, which has been touted as a potential window for optical communications, the active Si-SiN multilayer platform, silicon switching as well as hybrid Ⅲ- Ⅴ/silicon photonic tunable lasers operating from 1881-1947, 1955-1992 nm has been demonstrated for the first time. In addition, at the application-rich wavelength region near 1.65 µm, a sub-kHz linewidth, hybrid Ⅲ-Ⅴ/silicon photonic tunable laser with a range of 1647-1690 nm is reported. Doctor of Philosophy 2021-02-22T05:45:17Z 2021-02-22T05:45:17Z 2020 Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy Sia, B. J. X. (2020). Development of hybrid/active/passive silicon photonics for future technologies. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146497 10.32657/10356/146497 en NRF-CRP12-2013-04 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
spellingShingle Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering::Optics, optoelectronics, photonics
Sia, Brian Jia Xu
Development of hybrid/active/passive silicon photonics for future technologies
title Development of hybrid/active/passive silicon photonics for future technologies
title_full Development of hybrid/active/passive silicon photonics for future technologies
title_fullStr Development of hybrid/active/passive silicon photonics for future technologies
title_full_unstemmed Development of hybrid/active/passive silicon photonics for future technologies
title_short Development of hybrid/active/passive silicon photonics for future technologies
title_sort development of hybrid active passive silicon photonics for future technologies
topic Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering::Optics, optoelectronics, photonics
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146497
work_keys_str_mv AT siabrianjiaxu developmentofhybridactivepassivesiliconphotonicsforfuturetechnologies