| Literature DB >> 32588481 |
Jiajiu Zheng1, Zhuoran Fang1, Changming Wu1, Shifeng Zhu2, Peipeng Xu3, Jonathan K Doylend4, Sanchit Deshmukh5, Eric Pop5, Scott Dunham1,2, Mo Li1,2, Arka Majumdar1,2.
Abstract
Reconfigurability of photonic integrated circuits (PICs) has become increasingly important due to the growing demands for electronic-photonic systems on a chip driven by emerging applications, including neuromorphic computing, quantum information, and microwave photonics. Success in these fields usually requires highly scalable photonic switching units as essential building blocks. Current photonic switches, however, mainly rely on materials with weak, volatile thermo-optic or electro-optic modulation effects, resulting in large footprints and high energy consumption. As a promising alternative, chalcogenide phase-change materials (PCMs) exhibit strong optical modulation in a static, self-holding fashion, but the scalability of present PCM-integrated photonic applications is still limited by the poor optical or electrical actuation approaches. Here, with phase transitions actuated by in situ silicon PIN diode heaters, scalable nonvolatile electrically reconfigurable photonic switches using PCM-clad silicon waveguides and microring resonators are demonstrated. As a result, intrinsically compact and energy-efficient switching units operated with low driving voltages, near-zero additional loss, and reversible switching with high endurance are obtained in a complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS)-compatible process. This work can potentially enable very large-scale CMOS-integrated programmable electronic-photonic systems such as optical neural networks and general-purpose integrated photonic processors.Entities:
Keywords: integrated photonics; nonvolatile photonic switches; phase-change materials; reconfigurable photonics; silicon photonics
Year: 2020 PMID: 32588481 DOI: 10.1002/adma.202001218
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849