Thourhout, Van, D.; Spuesens, T.; Selvaraja, S.K.; Liu, Liu; Roelkens, G.C.; Kumar, R.; Morthier, G.; Rojo-Romeo, P.; Mandorlo, F.; Régreny, P.; Raz, O.; Kopp, C.; Grenouillet, L. Document VersionPublisher's PDF, also known as Version of Record (includes final page, issue and volume numbers)Please check the document version of this publication:• A submitted manuscript is the author's version of the article upon submission and before peer-review. There can be important differences between the submitted version and the official published version of record. People interested in the research are advised to contact the author for the final version of the publication, or visit the DOI to the publisher's website.• The final author version and the galley proof are versions of the publication after peer review.• The final published version features the final layout of the paper including the volume, issue and page numbers. Link to publication Citation for published version (APA):Thourhout, Van, D., Spuesens, T., Selvaraja, S. K., Liu, L., Roelkens, G., Kumar, R., ... Grenouillet, L. (2010). Nanophotonic devices for optical interconnect. IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics, 16(5), 1363-1375. DOI: 10.1109/JSTQE.2010 General rights Copyright and moral rights for the publications made accessible in the public portal are retained by the authors and/or other copyright owners and it is a condition of accessing publications that users recognise and abide by the legal requirements associated with these rights.• Users may download and print one copy of any publication from the public portal for the purpose of private study or research.• You may not further distribute the material or use it for any profit-making activity or commercial gain • You may freely distribute the URL identifying the publication in the public portal ? Take down policyIf you believe that this document breaches copyright please contact us providing details, and we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate your claim. Abstract-We review recent progress in nanophotonic devices for compact optical interconnect networks. We focus on microdisklaser-based transmitters and discuss improved design and advanced functionality including all-optical wavelength conversion and flip-flops. Next we discuss the fabrication uniformity of the passive routing circuits and their thermal tuning. Finally, we discuss the performance of a wavelength selective detector.Index Terms-Flip-flop, heterogeneous integration, microdisk laser (MDL), network-on-chip, photonic integration, process uniformity, silicon-on-insulator (SOI), wavelength conversion.
Recommended by Pavel ChebenPhotonics on CMOS is the integration of microelectronics technology and optics components to enable either improved functionality of the electronic circuit or miniaturization of optical functions. The integration of a photonic layer on an electronic circuit has been studied with three routes. For combined fabrication at the front end level, several building blocks using a silicon on insulator rib technology have been developed: slightly etched rib waveguide with low (0.1 dB/cm) propagation loss, a high speed and high responsivity Ge integrated photodetector and a 10 GHz Si modulators. Next, a wafer bonding of silicon rib and stripe technologies was achieved above the metallization layers of a CMOS wafer. Last, direct fabrication of a photonic layer at the back-end level was achieved using low-temperature processes with amorphous silicon waveguide (loss 5 dB/cm), followed by the molecular bonding of InP dice and by the processing in microelectronics environment of InP μsources and detector.
Abstract-As the demand for bandwidth increases, optical interconnects are coming closer and closer to the chip. Optical interconnects on silicon-on-insulator (SOI) are desirable as this allows for integration with CMOS and the mature processing can be used for photonic integrated circuits. A heterogeneous integration process can be used to include III-V active optical components on SOI. For dense integration compact sources and detectors are required, but they typically need different epitaxial structures to be efficient which limits the integration density. We propose to use an epitaxial structure, which contains both the layers for a laser and for a detector, hereby enabling very compact integration of sources and detectors. Microdisk lasers and waveguide detectors using this epi were completely fabricated in a 200 mm CMOS pilot line and the results are discussed here.Index Terms-Heterogeneous integration, microdisk laser (MDL), optical interconnect, photonic integration, silicon-oninsulator (SOI), waveguide detector.
GaAsPN semiconductors are promising material for the development of high-efficiency tandem solar cells on silicon substrates. GaAsPN diluted-nitride alloy is studied as the top-junction material due to its perfect lattice matching with the Si substrate and its ideal bandgap energy allowing a perfect current matching with the Si bottom cell. The GaP/Si interface is also studied in order to obtain defect-free GaP/Si pseudo-substrates suitable for the subsequent GaAsPN top junctions growth. Result shows that a double-step growth procedure suppresses most of the microtwins and a bi-stepped Si buffer can be grown, suitable to reduce the anti-phase domains density. We also review our recent progress in materials development of the GaAsPN alloy and our recent studies of all the different building blocks toward the development of a PIN solar cell. GaAsPN alloy with energy bandgap around 1.8 eV, lattice matched with the Si substrate, has been achieved. This alloy displays efficient photoluminescence at room temperature and good light absorption. An earlystage GaAsPN PIN solar cell prototype has been grown on a GaP(001) substrate. The external quantum efficiency and the I-V curve show that carriers have been extracted from the GaAsPN alloy absorber, with an open-circuit voltage above 1 eV, however a low short-circuit current density obtained suggests that GaAsPN structural properties need further optimization. Considering all the pathways for improvement, the 2.25% efficiency and IQE around 35% obtained under AM1.5G is however promising, therefore validating our approach for obtaining a lattice-matched dual-junction solar cell on silicon substrate.
Abstract. Color management of integrated photovoltaics must meet two criteria of performance: provide maximum conversion efficiency and allow getting the chosen colors with an appropriate brightness, more particularly when using side by side solar cells of different colors. As the cooling conditions are not necessarily optimal, we need to take into account the influence of the heat transfer and temperature. In this article, we focus on the color space and brightness achieved by varying the antireflective properties of flat silicon solar cells. We demonstrate that taking into account the thermal effects allows freely choosing the color and adapting the brightness with a small impact on the conversion efficiency, except for dark blue solar cells. This behavior is especially true when heat exchange by convection is low. Our optical simulations show that the perceived color, for single layer ARC, is not varying with the position of the observer, whatever the chosen color. The use of a double layer ARC adds flexibility to tune the wanted color since the color space is greatly increased in the green and yellow directions. Last, choosing the accurate material allows both bright colors and high conversion efficiency at the same time.
A perturbative analysis is proposed to estimate optical losses for electrically pumped micro-disk lasers. The optical field interaction with the electrical contacts and the optimization of their implementation is investigated. Our model shows a good agreement with 3D Finite Difference Time Domain (FDTD) computation and can be used for designing contacts for thin micro-disks, with a considerably reduced calculation time. We also demonstrate that losses induced by the contacts can be exploited to select the optical mode of a micro-laser.
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