Open Access
Advanced Photonics, volume 3, issue 02
Taking silicon photonics modulators to a higher performance level: state-of-the-art and a review of new technologies
Abdul Rahim
1
,
Artur Hermans
1
,
Benjamin Wohlfeil
2
,
Despoina Petousi
2
,
Bart Kuyken
1
,
Dries Van Thourhout
1
,
R. Baets
1
2
ADVA Optical Networking, Berlin
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2021-04-29
Journal:
Advanced Photonics
scimago Q1
SJR: 5.361
CiteScore: 22.7
Impact factor: 20.6
ISSN: 25775421
Abstract
Optical links are moving to higher and higher transmission speeds while shrinking to shorter and shorter ranges where optical links are envisaged even at the chip scale. The scaling in data speed and span of the optical links demands modulators to be concurrently performant and cost-effective. Silicon photonics (SiPh), a photonic integrated circuit technology that leverages the fabrication sophistication of complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor technology, is well-positioned to deliver the performance, price, and manufacturing volume for the high-speed modulators of future optical communication links. SiPh has relied on the plasma dispersion effect, either in injection, depletion, or accumulation mode, to demonstrate efficient high-speed modulators. The high-speed plasma dispersion silicon modulators have been commercially deployed and have demonstrated excellent performance. Recent years have seen a paradigm shift where the integration of various electro-refractive and electro-absorptive materials has opened up additional routes toward performant SiPh modulators. These modulators are in the early years of their development. They promise to extend the performance beyond the limits set by the physical properties of silicon. The focus of our study is to provide a comprehensive review of contemporary (i.e., plasma dispersion modulators) and new modulator implementations that involve the integration of novel materials with SiPh.
Found
Are you a researcher?
Create a profile to get free access to personal recommendations for colleagues and new articles.