Abstract:We demonstrate optically stable amorphous silicon nanowires with both high nonlinear figure of merit (FOM) of ~5 and high nonlinearity Re(γ) = 1200W −1 m −1 . We observe no degradation in these parameters over the entire course of our experiments including systematic study under operation at 2 W coupled peak power (i.e. ~2GW/cm 2 ) over timescales of at least an hour.
We report the first demonstration of an electrically driven hybrid silicon/III-V laser based on adiabatic mode transformers. The hybrid structure is formed by two vertically superimposed waveguides separated by a 100-nm-thick SiO2 layer. The top waveguide, fabricated in an InP/InGaAsP-based heterostructure, serves to provide optical gain. The bottom Si-waveguides system, which supports all optical functions, is constituted by two tapered rib-waveguides (mode transformers), two distributed Bragg reflectors (DBRs) and a surface-grating coupler. The supermodes of this hybrid structure are controlled by an appropriate design of the tapers located at the edges of the gain region. In the middle part of the device almost all the field resides in the III-V waveguide so that the optical mode experiences maximal gain, while in regions near the III-V facets, mode transformers ensure an efficient transfer of the power flow towards Si-waveguides. The investigated device operates under quasi-continuous wave regime. The room temperature threshold current is 100 mA, the side-mode suppression ratio is as high as 20 dB, and the fiber-coupled output power is ~7 mW.
We experimentally demonstrate excitability in a semiconductor two-dimensional photonic crystal. Excitability is a nonlinear dynamical mechanism underlying pulselike responses to small perturbations in systems possessing one stable state. We show that a band-edge photonic crystal resonator exhibits class II excitability, resulting from the nonlinear coupling between the high-Q optical mode, the charge-carrier density, and the fast (sub-micros) thermal dynamics. In this context, the critical slowing down of the electro-optical dynamics close to the excitable threshold can delay the optical response by an amount comparable to the duration of the output pulse (5 ns). The latter results from a short thermal dynamical excursion along a high local intensity manifold of the phase space.
Two-dimensional (2-D) compact photonic crystal reflectors on suspended InP membranes were studied under normal incidence. We report the first experimental demonstration of 2-D broadband reflectors (experimental stopband superior to 200 nm, theoretical stopband of 350 nm). They are based on the coupling of free space waves with two slow Bloch modes of the crystal. Moreover, they present a very strong sensitivity of the polarization dependence, when modifying their geometry. A compact (50 50 m 2) demonstrator was realized and characterized, behaving either as a broadband reflector or as a broadband transmitter, depending on the polarization of the incident wave. Experimental results are in good agreement with numerical simulations.
In this letter, the authors report the first demonstration of laser operation in long-wavelength opticallypumped vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers for photonics-oncomplementary metal-oxide-semiconductor back-end integration using 1-D double photonic crystal mirrors. The full exploitation of surface-addressable slow Bloch modes in such photonic architectures promotes an optimized tailoring of light confinement resulting in compact single-mode emitters capable to operate continuous-wave with thresholds in the sub-mW range.
We report on the design and fabrication of heterogeneous and compact surface-emitting microlasers, optically pumped and operating at 1.5μm at room-temperature. A very low threshold, below 15μW, is achieved. The devices consists of a top two-dimensional InP photonic crystal slab, including four InAsP quantum wells, a SiO2 bonding layer, and a bottom high index contrast Si∕SiO2 Bragg mirror deposited on a Si wafer. The graphitelike photonic crystal lattice is tailored for vertical emission. We theoretically and experimentally demonstrate that the Bragg reflector can strongly enhance the quality factor of the photonic crystal resonant mode, leading to a drastic decrease of the lasing threshold.
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