Silicon-plasmonics enables the fabrication of active photonic circuits in CMOS technology with unprecedented operation speed and integration density. Regarding applications in chip-level optical interconnects, fast and efficient plasmonic photodetectors with ultrasmall footprints are of special interest. A particularly promising approach to silicon-plasmonic photodetection is based on internal photoemission (IPE), which exploits intrinsic absorption in plasmonic waveguides at the metal-dielectric interface. However, while IPE plasmonic photodetectors have already been demonstrated, their performance is still far below that of conventional high-speed photodiodes. In this paper, we demonstrate a novel class of IPE devices with performance parameters comparable to those of state-of-the-art photodiodes while maintaining footprints below 1 μm 2 . The structures are based on asymmetric metal-semiconductormetal waveguides with a width of less than 75 nm. We measure record-high sensitivities of up to 0.12 A/W at a wavelength of 1550 nm. The detectors exhibit opto-electronic bandwidths of at least 40 GHz. We demonstrate reception of on-off keying data at rates of 40 Gbit/s.
High-speed communication systems rely on spectrally efficient modulation formats that encode information both on the amplitude and on the phase of an electromagnetic carrier. Coherent detection of such signals typically uses rather complex receiver schemes, requiring a continuous-wave (c.w.) local oscillator (LO) as a phase reference and a mixer circuit for spectral down-conversion. In optical communications, the so-called Kramers-Kronig (KK) scheme has been demonstrated to greatly simplify the receiver, reducing the hardware to a single photodiode [1][2][3] . In this approach, an LO tone is transmitted along with the signal, and the amplitude and phase of the complex signal envelope are reconstructed from the photocurrent by digital signal processing. This reconstruction exploits the fact that the real and the imaginary part, or, equivalently, the amplitude and the phase of an analytic signal are connected by a KK-type relation [4][5][6] . Here, we transfer the KK scheme to high-speed wireless communications at THz carrier frequencies. We use a Schottky-barrier diode (SBD) as a nonlinear element and generalize the theory of KK processing to account for the non-quadratic characteristics of this device. Using 16-state quadrature amplitude modulation (16QAM), we transmit a net data rate of 115 Gbit/s at a carrier frequency of 0.3 THz over a distance of 110 m.
Optoelectronic signal processing offers great potential for generation and detection of ultra-broadband waveforms in the THz range, so-called T-waves. However, fabrication of the underlying high-speed photodiodes and photoconductors still relies on complex processes using dedicated III-V semiconductor substrates. This severely limits the application potential of current T-wave transmitters and receivers, in particular when it comes to highly integrated systems that combine photonic signal processing with optoelectronic conversion to THz frequencies. In this paper, we demonstrate that these limitations can be overcome by plasmonic internal photoemission detectors (PIPED). PIPED can be realized on the silicon photonic platform and hence allow to leverage the enormous opportunities of the associated device portfolio. In our experiments, we demonstrate both T-wave signal generation and coherent detection at frequencies of up to 1 THz. To proof the viability of our concept, we monolithically integrate a PIPED transmitter and a PIPED receiver on a common silicon photonic chip and use them for measuring the complex transfer impedance of an integrated T-wave device.Terahertz signals (T-waves) offer promising perspectives for a wide variety of applications, comprising high-speed communications 1-3 , microwave photonics 4 , spectroscopy 5,6 , life sciences 7,8 , as well as industrial metrology 9,10 . Optoelectronic signal processing techniques are particularly attractive both for T-wave generation 1,11,12 and detection [13][14][15] , especially when broadband operation is required. On a conceptual level, optoelectronic T-wave generation relies on mixing of two optical signals oscillating at frequencies and b f in a high-speed photodetector, for which the photocurrent depends on the incident optical power 11 . The photocurrent oscillates with a difference frequency THz Rx,1 U t modulates the device sensitivity. The PIPED photocurrent is then given by the product of the time-variant sensitivity with the time-variant optical power Rx P t .
Photonics might play a key role in future wireless communication systems that operate at THz carrier frequencies. A prime example is the generation of THz data streams by mixing optical signals in high-speed photodetectors. Over the previous years, this concept has enabled a series of wireless transmission experiments at record-high data rates. Reception of THz signals in these experiments, however, still relied on electronic circuits. In this paper, we show that wireless THz receivers can also greatly benefit from optoelectronic signal processing techniques, in particular when carrier frequencies beyond 0.1 THz and wideband tunability over more than an octave is required. Our approach relies on a high-speed photoconductor and a photonic local oscillator for optoelectronic down-conversion of THz data signals to an intermediate frequency band that is easily accessible by conventional microelectronics. By tuning the frequency of the photonic local oscillator, we can cover a wide range of carrier frequencies between 0.03 THz and 0.34 THz. We demonstrate line rates of up to 10 Gbit/s on a single channel and up to 30 Gbit/s on multiple channels over a distance of 58 m. To the best of our knowledge, our experiments represent the first demonstration of a THz transmission link that exploits optoelectronic signal processing techniques both at the transmitter and the receiver. LO LO,a LO,b ff f of two unmodulated c.w. tones acts as photonic local oscillator (T-wave-to-electric conversion, T/E).
We demonstrate wireless transmission of QPSK signals at a carrier frequency of 0.3 THz using a generalized Kramers-Kronig receiver with a Schottky barrier diode. We achieve a line rate of 100 Gbit/s over a transmission distance of 110 m.
We demonstrate capacitively coupled silicon-organic hybrid (SOH) modulator with a πvoltage-length product of 1.3 V mm and 3 dB EO bandwidth exceeding 65 GHz. The modulator is used for 200 Gbit/s (100 GBd) PAM-4 signaling.
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