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1.
Opt Express ; 31(22): 35971-35981, 2023 Oct 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38017757

ABSTRACT

Optical equalization can be used for chromatic dispersion compensation in optical communication systems to improve the system performance; however, optical signal processing (OSP) is generally specifically designed for transmission channels, that is non-adaptive to dynamic transmission distortions compared with digital signal processing (DSP). In this contribution, we demonstrate optical equalization using a photonic integrated circuit (PIC) filter for chromatic dispersion compensation, with static and adaptive techniques: (a) the static optical equalizer is calibrated based on the known fiber dispersion and length, by using the fractional delay reference method; (b) the adaptive optical equalizer is updated iteratively to compensate transmission impairments based on a least-mean squares (LMS) algorithm. Experimental results show that both the static optical equalizer and the adaptive optical LMS equalizer can give an 18-dB Q-factor for a 14-Gbd QPSK signal transmitting over 30 km. To highlight the capability of the optical equalizers, we use simulations to show the improvement in dispersion compensating characteristics by implementing additional taps.

2.
Opt Express ; 31(21): 34189-34200, 2023 Oct 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37859180

ABSTRACT

Ridge resonators are a recently introduced integrated photonic circuit element based on bound states in the continuum (BICs) which can produce a single, sharp resonance over a broad wavelength range with high extinction ratio. However, to excite these resonators, a broad beam of laterally unbound slab mode is required, resulting in a large device footprint, which is not attractive for integrated photonic circuits. In this contribution, we propose and numerically validate a guided-mode waveguide structure that can be analogue to the BIC-based ridge resonators. Our simulations show that the proposed guided-mode waveguide structure can produce resonances with similar characteristics, yet with a significantly reduced footprint. Furthermore, we investigate the influence of the resonator's dimensions on the bandwidth of the resonance, demonstrating that resonances with Q-factors from low to very high (> 10000) are feasible. We believe that the reduced footprint and ability to design filters systematically make the guided-mode waveguide resonators an attractive photonic circuit component with particular value for foundry fabricated silicon photonic circuits.

3.
Opt Lett ; 48(17): 4713-4716, 2023 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37656593

ABSTRACT

Lithium niobate on insulator (LNOI) platforms promise unique advantages in realizing high-speed, large-capacity, and large-scale photonic integrated circuits (PICs) by leveraging lithium niobate's attractive material properties, which include electro-optic and nonlinear optic properties, low material loss, and a wide transparency window. Optical mode interleavers can increase the functionality of future PICs in LNOI by enabling optical mode division multiplexing (MDM) systems, allowing variable mode assignment while maintaining high channel utilization and capacity. In this Letter, we experimentally demonstrate an optical mode interleaver based on an asymmetric Y-junction on the LNOI platform, which exhibits an insertion loss of below 0.46 dB and modal cross talk of below -13.0 dB over a wavelength range of 1500-1600 nm. The demonstrated mode interleaver will be an attractive circuit component in future high-speed and large-capacity PICs due to its simple structure, scalability, and capacity for efficient and flexible mode manipulation on the LNOI platform.

4.
Opt Express ; 31(7): 11610-11623, 2023 Mar 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37155792

ABSTRACT

Reservoir computing is an analog bio-inspired computation scheme for efficiently processing time-dependent signals, the photonic implementations of which promise a combination of massive parallel information processing, low power consumption, and high-speed operation. However, most of these implementations, especially for the case of time-delay reservoir computing, require extensive multi-dimensional parameter optimization to find the optimal combination of parameters for a given task. We propose a novel, largely passive integrated photonic TDRC scheme based on an asymmetric Mach-Zehnder interferometer in a self-feedback configuration, where the nonlinearity is provided by the photodetector, and with only one tunable parameter in the form of a phase shifting element that, as a result of our configuration, allows also to tune the feedback strength, consequently tuning the memory capacity in a lossless manner. Through numerical simulations, we show that the proposed scheme achieves good performance -when compared to other integrated photonic architectures- on the temporal bitwise XOR task and various time series prediction tasks, while greatly reducing hardware and operational complexity.

5.
Opt Express ; 31(5): 7277-7289, 2023 Feb 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36859863

ABSTRACT

Photon-pair sources based on thin film lithium niobate on insulator technology have a great potential for integrated optical quantum information processing. We report on such a source of correlated twin-photon pairs generated by spontaneous parametric down conversion in a silicon nitride (SiN) rib loaded thin film periodically poled lithium niobate (LN) waveguide. The generated correlated photon pairs have a wavelength centred at 1560 nm compatible with present telecom infrastructure, a large bandwidth (21 THz) and a brightness of ∼2.5 × 105 pairs/s/mW/GHz. Using the Hanbury Brown and Twiss effect, we have also shown heralded single photon emission, achieving an autocorrelation g H(2)(0)≃0.04.

6.
Opt Express ; 31(1): 626-634, 2023 Jan 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36606997

ABSTRACT

Integrated photonic resonators based on bound states in the continuum (BICs) on the silicon-on-insulator (SOI) platform have the potential for novel, mass-manufacturable resonant devices. While the nature of BIC-based ridge resonators requires the resonators to be extended in the (axial) propagation direction of the resonant mode, the requirement for excitation from the quasi-continuum extends the resonator structures also in the lateral dimensions, resulting in large device footprints. To overcome this footprint requirement, we investigate the translation of BIC-based ridge resonators into a guided mode system with finite lateral dimensions. We draw analogies between the resulting waveguide system and the BIC-based resonators and numerically demonstrate that, analog to the BIC-based resonators, such a waveguide system can exhibit spectrally narrow-band inversion of its transmissive behavior.

7.
Science ; 379(6627): eabj4396, 2023 01 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36603073

ABSTRACT

Lithium niobate (LN), first synthesized 70 years ago, has been widely used in diverse applications ranging from communications to quantum optics. These high-volume commercial applications have provided the economic means to establish a mature manufacturing and processing industry for high-quality LN crystals and wafers. Breakthrough science demonstrations to commercial products have been achieved owing to the ability of LN to generate and manipulate electromagnetic waves across a broad spectrum, from microwave to ultraviolet frequencies. Here, we provide a high-level Review of the history of LN as an optical material, its different photonic platforms, engineering concepts, spectral coverage, and essential applications before providing an outlook for the future of LN.

8.
Opt Lett ; 48(1): 171-174, 2023 Jan 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36563398

ABSTRACT

Lithium niobate on insulator (LNOI) is a promising platform for high-speed photonic integrated circuits (PICs) that are used for communication systems due to the excellent electro-optic properties of lithium niobate (LN). In such circuits, the high-speed electro-optical modulators and switches need to be integrated with passive circuit components that are used for routing the optical signals. Polarization beam splitters (PBSs) are one of the fundamental passive circuit components for high-speed PICs that can be used to (de)multiplex two orthogonal polarization optical modes, enabling on-chip polarization division multiplexing (PDM) systems, which are suitable for enhancing the data capacity of PICs. In this Letter, we design and experimentally demonstrate a high-performance PBS constructed by a photonic crystal (PC)-assisted multimode interference (MMI) coupler. The measured polarization extinction ratio (ER) of the fabricated device is 15 dB in the wavelength range from 1525 to 1565 nm, which makes them suitable for the high-speed and large data capacity PICs required for future communication systems.

9.
Opt Lett ; 47(14): 3531-3534, 2022 Jul 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35838720

ABSTRACT

The manipulation of optical modes directly in a multimode waveguide without affecting the transmission of undesired signal carriers is of significance to realize a flexible and simple structured optical network-on-chip. In this Letter, an arbitrary optical mode and wavelength carrier access scheme is proposed based on a series of multimode microring resonators and one multimode bus waveguide with constant width. As a proof-of-concept, a three-mode (de)multiplexing device is designed, fabricated, and experimentally demonstrated. A new, to the best of our knowledge, phase-matching idea is employed to keep the bus waveguide width constant. The mode coupling regions and transmission regions of the microring resonators are designed carefully to selectively couple and transmit different optical modes. The extinction ratio of the microring resonators is larger than 21.0 dB. The mode and wavelength cross-talk for directly (de)multiplexing are less than -12.8 dB and -19.0 dB, respectively. It would be a good candidate for future large-scale multidimensional optical networks.

10.
Opt Lett ; 46(23): 5986-5989, 2021 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34851940

ABSTRACT

Electro-optic (EO) modulators, which convert signals from the electrical to optical domain plays a key role in modern optical communication systems. Lithium niobate on insulator (LNOI) technology has emerged as a competitive solution to realize high-performance integrated EO modulators. In this Letter, we design and experimentally demonstrate a Mach-Zehnder interferometer-based modulator on a silicon nitride loaded LNOI platform, which not only takes full advantage of the excellent EO effect of LiNbO3, but also avoids the direct etching of LiNbO3 thin film. The measured half-wave voltage length product of the fabricated modulator is 2.24 V·cm, and the extinction ratio is ∼20dB. Moreover, the 3 dB EO bandwidth is ∼30GHz, while the modulated data rate for on-off key signals can reach up to 80 Gbps.

11.
Opt Express ; 29(17): 27092-27103, 2021 Aug 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34615131

ABSTRACT

Photonic resonators based on bound states in the continuum are attractive for sensing and telecommunication applications, as they have the potential to achieve ultra-high Q-factor resonators in a compact footprint. Recently, ridge resonators - leaky mode resonators based on a bound state in the continuum - have been demonstrated on a scalable photonic integrated circuit platform. However, high Q-factor ridge resonators have thus far not been achieved. In this contribution, we investigate the influence of excitation beam width and optical losses on the spectral response of ridge resonators. We show that for practical applications, the space required of the excitation beam is the limiting factor on the highest achievable Q-factor.

12.
Opt Express ; 29(12): 18905-18914, 2021 Jun 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34154136

ABSTRACT

In this contribution we present a new approach to achieve high extinction short and long pass wavelength filters in the integrated photonic platform of lithium niobate on insulator. The filtering of unwanted wavelengths is achieved by employing lateral leakage and is related to the bound state in the continuum phenomenon. We show that it is possible to control the filter edge wavelength by adjusting the waveguide dimensions and that an extinction of hundreds of dB/cm is readily achievable. This enabled us to design a pump wavelength suppression of more than 100 dB in a 3.5 mm long waveguide, which is essential for on-chip integration of quantum-correlated photon pair sources. These findings pave the way to integrate multi wavelength experiments on chip for the next generation of photonic integrated circuits.

13.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 7978, 2021 Apr 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33846403

ABSTRACT

We fabricated tantalum pentoxide (Ta2O5) channel waveguides and used them to experimentally demonstrate higher-order mode supercontinuum (SC) generation. The Ta2O5 waveguide has a high nonlinear refractive index which was in an order magnitude of 10-14 cm2/W and was designed to be anomalously dispersive at the pumping wavelength. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time a higher-order mode femtosecond pump based broadband SC has been measured from a nonlinear waveguide using the phase-matching method. This enabled us to demonstrate a SC spectrum spanning from 842 to 1462 nm (at - 30 dB), which corresponds to 0.83 octaves, when using the TM10 waveguide mode. When using the TE10 mode, the SC bandwidth is slightly reduced for the same excitation peak power. In addition, we theoretically estimated and discussed the possibility of using the broadband higher-order modes emitted from the Ta2O5 waveguide for trapping nanoparticles. Hence, we believe that demonstrated Ta2O5 waveguide are a promising broadband light source for optical applications such as frequency metrology, Raman spectroscopy, molecular spectroscopy and optical coherence tomography.

15.
Nature ; 589(7840): 44-51, 2021 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33408378

ABSTRACT

Convolutional neural networks, inspired by biological visual cortex systems, are a powerful category of artificial neural networks that can extract the hierarchical features of raw data to provide greatly reduced parametric complexity and to enhance the accuracy of prediction. They are of great interest for machine learning tasks such as computer vision, speech recognition, playing board games and medical diagnosis1-7. Optical neural networks offer the promise of dramatically accelerating computing speed using the broad optical bandwidths available. Here we demonstrate a universal optical vector convolutional accelerator operating at more than ten TOPS (trillions (1012) of operations per second, or tera-ops per second), generating convolutions of images with 250,000 pixels-sufficiently large for facial image recognition. We use the same hardware to sequentially form an optical convolutional neural network with ten output neurons, achieving successful recognition of handwritten digit images at 88 per cent accuracy. Our results are based on simultaneously interleaving temporal, wavelength and spatial dimensions enabled by an integrated microcomb source. This approach is scalable and trainable to much more complex networks for demanding applications such as autonomous vehicles and real-time video recognition.

16.
Adv Mater ; 32(45): e2004247, 2020 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32960475

ABSTRACT

Atomically thin materials face an ongoing challenge of scalability, hampering practical deployment despite their fascinating properties. Tin monosulfide (SnS), a low-cost, naturally abundant layered material with a tunable bandgap, displays properties of superior carrier mobility and large absorption coefficient at atomic thicknesses, making it attractive for electronics and optoelectronics. However, the lack of successful synthesis techniques to prepare large-area and stoichiometric atomically thin SnS layers (mainly due to the strong interlayer interactions) has prevented exploration of these properties for versatile applications. Here, SnS layers are printed with thicknesses varying from a single unit cell (0.8 nm) to multiple stacked unit cells (≈1.8 nm) synthesized from metallic liquid tin, with lateral dimensions on the millimeter scale. It is reveal that these large-area SnS layers exhibit a broadband spectral response ranging from deep-ultraviolet (UV) to near-infrared (NIR) wavelengths (i.e., 280-850 nm) with fast photodetection capabilities. For single-unit-cell-thick layered SnS, the photodetectors show upto three orders of magnitude higher responsivity (927 A W-1 ) than commercial photodetectors at a room-temperature operating wavelength of 660 nm. This study opens a new pathway to synthesize reproduceable nanosheets of large lateral sizes for broadband, high-performance photodetectors. It also provides important technological implications for scalable applications in integrated optoelectronic circuits, sensing, and biomedical imaging.

17.
Nat Commun ; 11(1): 2568, 2020 May 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32444605

ABSTRACT

Micro-combs - optical frequency combs generated by integrated micro-cavity resonators - offer the full potential of their bulk counterparts, but in an integrated footprint. They have enabled breakthroughs in many fields including spectroscopy, microwave photonics, frequency synthesis, optical ranging, quantum sources, metrology and ultrahigh capacity data transmission. Here, by using a powerful class of micro-comb called soliton crystals, we achieve ultra-high data transmission over 75 km of standard optical fibre using a single integrated chip source. We demonstrate a line rate of 44.2 Terabits s-1 using the telecommunications C-band at 1550 nm with a spectral efficiency of 10.4 bits s-1 Hz-1. Soliton crystals exhibit robust and stable generation and operation as well as a high intrinsic efficiency that, together with an extremely low soliton micro-comb spacing of 48.9 GHz enable the use of a very high coherent data modulation format (64 QAM - quadrature amplitude modulated). This work demonstrates the capability of optical micro-combs to perform in demanding and practical optical communications networks.

18.
Nat Commun ; 11(1): 1331, 2020 Mar 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32165610

ABSTRACT

Recent advances in nonlinear optics have revolutionized integrated photonics, providing on-chip solutions to a wide range of new applications. Currently, state of the art integrated nonlinear photonic devices are mainly based on dielectric material platforms, such as Si3N4 and SiO2. While semiconductor materials feature much higher nonlinear coefficients and convenience in active integration, they have suffered from high waveguide losses that prevent the realization of efficient nonlinear processes on-chip. Here, we challenge this status quo and demonstrate a low loss AlGaAs-on-insulator platform with anomalous dispersion and quality (Q) factors beyond 1.5 × 106. Such a high quality factor, combined with high nonlinear coefficient and small mode volume, enabled us to demonstrate a Kerr frequency comb threshold of only ∼36 µW in a resonator with a 1 THz free spectral range, ∼100 times lower compared to that in previous semiconductor platforms. Moreover, combs with broad spans (>250 nm) have been generated with a pump power of ∼300 µW, which is lower than the threshold power of state-of the-art dielectric micro combs. A soliton-step transition has also been observed for the first time in an AlGaAs resonator.

19.
Opt Express ; 27(23): 34370-34381, 2019 Nov 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31878485

ABSTRACT

Wavelength filters are among the most important building blocks required for integrated optical circuits. However, existing filter building blocks provide only basic functionality with limited options for controlling the filter function unless sophisticated filter design techniques are employed. Conversely, in the microwave regime, elegant and powerful filter synthesis techniques exist which use coupled resonators. As waveguide ring resonators have emerged, researchers in the optical domain have sought to translate these techniques but the multi-wavelength spacing required to couple optical ring resonator structures severely limits the types of filters that can be realized. In this paper we show how recently reported ridge resonance structures can be arranged as coupled resonators with very close spacing and thus can be harnessed to achieved many of the filter functionalities available in the field of microwave engineering. Our filter is comprised of multiple parallel ridges on a common silicon slab, with each resonator exhibiting a resonant frequency and quality factor which can be controlled through engineering the geometry of the ridge. It is thus possible to choose appropriate combinations of ridge geometries to satisfy the conditions required by filter synthesis prototype. We demonstrate through rigorous simulation how our approach can be used to achieve high order optical bandpass filters at 1.55 µm center wavelength with Butterworth or Chebychev responses and analyse the impact of non-ideal behaviours on filter performance.

20.
Opt Express ; 27(26): 37795-37805, 2019 Dec 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31878554

ABSTRACT

Low temperature deposition of low loss silicon nitride (SiN) thin-films is very attractive as it opens opportunities for realization of multi-layer photonic chips and hybrid integration of optical waveguides with temperature sensitive platforms such as processed CMOS silicon electronics or lithium niobate on insulator. So far, the most common low-temperature deposition technique for SiN is plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD), however such SiN thin-films can suffer from significant losses at C-band wavelengths due to unwanted hydrogen bonds. In this contribution we present a back end of line (< 400°C), low loss SiN platform based on reactive sputtering for telecommunication applications. Waveguide losses of 0.8 dB/cm at 1550 nm and as low as 0.6 dB/cm at 1580 nm have been achieved for moderate confined waveguides which appear to be limited by patterning rather than material. These findings show that reactive sputtered SiN thin-films can have lower optical losses compared to PECVD SiN thin-films, and thus show promise for future hybrid integration platforms for applications such as high Q resonators, optical filters and delay lines for optical signal processing.

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