| Literature DB >> 32764622 |
Mengyue Xu1, Mingbo He1, Hongguang Zhang2,3, Jian Jian1, Ying Pan1, Xiaoyue Liu1, Lifeng Chen1, Xiangyu Meng1, Hui Chen1, Zhaohui Li1, Xi Xiao4,5, Shaohua Yu2,3, Siyuan Yu1, Xinlun Cai6.
Abstract
The coherent transmission technology using digital signal processing and advanced modulation formats, is bringing networks closer to the theoretical capacity limit of optical fibres, the Shannon limit. The in-phase/quadrature electro-optic modulator that encodes information on both the amplitude and the phase of light, is one of the underpinning devices for the coherent transmission technology. Ideally, such modulator should feature a low loss, low drive voltage, large bandwidth, low chirp and compact footprint. However, these requirements have been only met on separate occasions. Here, we demonstrate integrated thin-film lithium niobate in-phase/quadrature modulators that fulfil these requirements simultaneously. The presented devices exhibit greatly improved overall performance (half-wave voltage, bandwidth and optical loss) over traditional lithium niobate counterparts, and support modulation data rate up to 320 Gbit s-1. Our devices pave new routes for future high-speed, energy-efficient, and cost-effective communication networks.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32764622 PMCID: PMC7411015 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-17806-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1IQ modulator on the LNOI platform.
a Schematic of an LNOI-based IQ modulator. b Microscope image of the fabricated chip. c Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) image of the thermos-optic phase shifter. d SEM image of the cross-section of the LN waveguides. e SEM image the gold electrodes and the LN waveguides.
Fig. 2TO phase shifters performance.
a TO transmission curve as a function of the power dissipations. b Power shift from an MZM biased at quadrature using EO (green line) and TO (blue line) phase shifters as a function of the operating time.
Fig. 3Static EO characteristics.
a, b Normalised optical transmission of both branches of the 13-mm and 7.5-mm devices as a function of the applied voltage, showing Vπ of 1.9 V and 3.1 V, respectively. The inset of a shows the measured normalised transmission on a logarithmic scale, showing an extinction ratio greater than 25 dB. c Measured optical transmission at different wavelengths.
Fig. 4Small-signal response.
a EO bandwidths (S21 parameter) and b electrical reflection S11 of the 13-mm IQ modulator.
Fig. 5Data modulation testing.
a Experimental setup for coherent data transmission. AWG: arbitrary waveform generator, LO: local oscillator, OMA: optical modulation analyser, PC: polarisation controller. b–g Constellation diagram for QPSK signals with symbol rates of 60, 80, 100, and 110 Gbaud and 16 QAM signals with symbol rates of 60 and 80 Gbaud. h Measured curve of BER versus the received optical power for 60 Gbaud 16 QAM signal.
Comparison of several performance metrics of IQ modulators.
| 3-dB EO bandwidth (GHz) | Length of modulation area (mm) | On-chip loss (dB) | Data rate (Gb/s) (BER) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SOI[ | 7.5 | 32 | 4.5 | 6.8 | 360 (2 × 10−2) |
| InP[ | 1.5 | 67 | ~3.6 | ~2 | 448 (6.68 × 10−3) |
| InP[ | 1.7 | 43 | 4 | 7a | 64 |
| GaAs[ | 3 | 27 | 30 | <8 | 150 (1.1 × 10−2) |
| SOH[ | 1.6 | NA | 0.6 | 8.5b | 400 (1.7 × 10−2) |
| Plasmonic[ | 8.67 | >500 | 0.015c | 11.2 | 400 (4.5 × 10−2) |
| Commercial LN[ | 3.5 | 35 | 30~80 | NA | 256 |
| This work | 1.9 | ~48 | 13 | 1.8 | 320 (8.41 × 10−3) |
| 3.1 | >67 | 7.5 | 1.45 |
NA: not available.
aThis value was calculated from the 8 dB insertion loss and 1 dB loss in the spot-size converter.
bThis value was calculated from the 17.5 dB fibre-to-fibre loss and 9 dB off-chip coupling loss.
cThis value was calculated from the reported VπL of 130 V μm and length of 15 μm.