Optical communication - LETI Innovation Days
Transcription
Optical communication - LETI Innovation Days
Silicon Photonics Technologies for Green Photonics LETI Annual review 2013 Jean-Marc FEDELI © CEA. All rights reserved Source: IBM Optical communication everywhere? Optical communication Optical technology InP Si InP Si Electrical communication VCSEL Si VCSEL (Si) (Si) (Si) (Si) The rationale of silicon photonics is the fabrication of complex optical devices on cm² chips at low cost with low power consumption. Green photonics= reduction of the energy /bit from tens of pJ/bit to tens of fJ/bit © CEA. All rights reserved The 2000 decade: the search of Gbit/s 2002: Low loss strip waveguide 0,8 - 3dB/cm (MIT) 2003: Low loss rib waveguide 0,1dB/cm (IEF-LETI) 2003: 1 GHz Capacitive Si MZ Modulator (Intel) 2004: 10 GHz Capacitive Si MZ Modulator (Intel) 2004: 30 GHz MSM Ge photodiode (IEF-LETI) 2005: µdisc hybrid laser (INL-LETI-Gent University) 2006: FP hybrid laser (UCSB) 2007: 40 G Depletion Si MZ Modulator (Intel) 2007: 40 GHz Vertical PIN Ge Photodiode (IBM,IEF-LETI) 2009: 90 GHz Lateral PIN Ge Photodiode (IEF-LETI) 2010: 50G Depletion Si MZ Modulator (Surrey University-LETI) … |3 © CEA. All rights reserved The 2010 decade: the quest of the holy fJ/bit WDM OOK transceiver as example |4 © CEA. All rights reserved Reduction of the power of the receiver Increase of the sensitivity of the PD (A/W) Reduction of the TIA noise Reduction of the dissipated power of the TIA |5 © CEA. All rights reserved Lateral PIN Ge photodiodes performances Dark current median, mean and best values (769 dies per wafer) Photodiodes Wafer Median (nA) @-1V Mean (nA) Best (nA) Yield Responsivity @1550nm under zero bias Wi=0.5µm 1 196 310 <1 97.6% 2 48 208 <1 98% ~0.5A/W Wi=0.7µm 1 2 27.7 20 53 27.5 <1 <1 97.1% 97.5% ~0.6A/W Wi=1µm 1 17.7 29 ~1 98.8% 2 8.7 21.4 <1 97.3% ~0.8A/W Variation of the dark current due to the threading dislocations and to the alignment tolerance Reduction in responsivity with smaller Wi due to absorption in doped region © CEA. All rights reserved Opto-electric Bandwidth of Ge PD Extrapolated from measurements by single pole fit 1550nm 50GHz modulated laser + 50GHz network analyzer Zero bias bandwidth Higher bandwidth due to reduction of the intrinsic region width during the implantations Reduction of the sensitivity due to absorption in doped regions Ok for 10Gb/s, 25Gb/s and 40Gb/s © CEA. All rights reserved Improvement in sensitivity Classic PIN photodiodes with low bias Responsivity limited by quantum efficiency : 1 photon => 1 electron Sensitivity or minimum detectable power of a receiver (photodiode + TIA) inversely proportional to the responsivity of the photodiode ∝ Sensitivity limited by the noise of the TIA if the dark current of the photodiode is below 1µA (typically with available TIAs) At 40Gbps and BER = 1e-12, max sensitivity ~ -22.5dBm (with negligible photodiode noise) How to overcome the TIA noise limit? Increase of the photodiode responsivity To go beyond the quantum efficiency, gain is mandatory 1 photon gives rise to multiple electrons This can be achieved by using avalanche photodiodes © CEA. All rights reserved Waveguide Ge APD PIN 0.5A/W nominal responsivity 40Gbps @0V Gain over 30 Gain-Bandwidth product over 200GHz Breakdown voltage ~-8.6V 40 -3dB Bandwidth (GHz) 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 5 10 15 20 Gain 25 30 35 © CEA. All rights reserved 40 Reduction of optical losses in passive devices. Losses due to performances in fabrication Selection of low loss designs Reduction of overall losses with design tricks Reduction of the couplers insertion losses | 10 © CEA. All rights reserved Silicon waveguides SiO2 Si SiO2 Substrate SiO2 Si SiO2 Substrate loss ≈ 2 dB/cm for 500nm x 220nm strip waveguide Lower loss with larger width Loss due to the roughness of the edges Low radius of curvature Loss from 0.1dB/cm for rib waveguide due to reduction of the roughness of the edges Larger radius of curvature Transition from wide to regular width before turns Transition rib-strip © CEA. All rights reserved Reduction of insertion loss of grating couplers Move from uniform grating to cSi grating apodized grating Introduce Bragg mirror to reflect the transmitted light cSi grating pSi layer IC aSi grating with aSi mirrors layers © CEA. All rights reserved Filter devices with TO actuation Intensity (a. u.) Ring uniformity 9.00E-007 8.50E-007 8.00E-007 7.50E-007 7.00E-007 6.50E-007 6.00E-007 5.50E-007 5.00E-007 4.50E-007 4.00E-007 3.50E-007 3.00E-007 2.50E-007 2.00E-007 1.50E-007 1.00E-007 5.00E-008 0.00E+000 ∆λ=3nm/10mW Group B #8 P0mW Group B #8 P2mW Group B #8 P4mW Group B #8 P6mW Group B #8 P8mW Group B #8 P10mW 1526 1528 1530 1532 1534 1536 1538 1540 1542 1544 LETI 200mm • Range λresmax - λresmin = 2.1119 nm • Std deviation = 0.593 nm The TO tuning is necessary for ring resonator to get rid of fabrication non-uniformity Sensitivity to the Si thickness is higher than width sensitivity Wavelength (nm) © CEA. All rights reserved Uniformity : correlation with waveguide geometry Correlation between Si thickness variation and resonance wavelength variation of RR on 300mm wafer Si Thickness range ≈ 6.5nm Resonant wavelength range ≈ 7nm Decrease the range of uniformity of Si thickness to reduce or even avoid the tuning © CEA. All rights reserved Reduction of power for modualtion | 15 © CEA. All rights reserved PN carrier depletion MZM Self-aligned carrier depletion modulator in 220nm Silicon-on-insulator Waveguide 220nm X 400nm 100nm slab height 2um buried oxide layer 1um top cladding oxide Thomson, D.J.; Gardes, F.Y.; Fedeli, J.-M.; Zlatanovic, S.; Youfang Hu; Kuo, B.P.P.; Myslivets, E.; Alic, N.; Radic, S.; Mashanovich, G.Z.; Reed, G.T.; "50-Gb/s Silicon Optical Modulator," Photonics Technology Letters, IEEE , vol.24, no.4, pp.234-236, Feb.15, 2012 Optical microscope image of fabricated device VpiLpi =2.3V.cm DC extinction ratio in excess of 10 dB with 6V drive Optical loss of 4.5dB/mm 50Gbit/s with a 3.1dB extinction ratio © CEA. All rights reserved PIPIN carrier depletion MZM Self-aligned carrier depletion modulator on 400nm Silicon-on-insulator Optical microscope image of fabricated device L=1.8mm => C ~0.5 pF Vpp = 7 V Energy/bit ~ 6 pJ/bit Waveguide 400nm X 420nm 100nm slab height 2um buried oxide layer 1um top cladding oxide VpiLpi = 3.5V.cm 40G with ER 6 dB Optical loss of 2dB/mm Melissa Ziebell , Delphine Marris-Morini, Gilles Rasigade, Jean-Marc Fédéli , Eric Cassan, David Bouville and Laurent Vivien, “ 40Gbit/s low-loss silicon optical modulator based on a pipin diode”, Optics Express Vol. 20, Issue 10, pp. 10591-10596 (2012) © CEA. All rights reserved Reduction of power for modulator Drive the modulator in push-pull mode (voltage reduction) Reduction of capacitance of depletion device Slow-wave device for reducing the length (corrugated waveguide or PC devices Ring Modulators Ring Assisted MZI Improvement of the efficiency (X10) Vpi.Lpi MZM Hybrid modulator Capacitive modulator ( capacitance increases ) EAM Hybrid modulator Ge EAM modulators (QCSE or FK) Targets : ~100 fJ/bit for longer off-chip distances, 10’s of fJ/bit for dense off-chip connections and a few fJ/bit for global onchip connections. D. A. B. Miller, Proc. IEEE 97(7), 1166–1185 (2009). Energy/bit = 1/4 C(Vpp)2 D.A.Miller “ Energy consumption in optical modulators for interconnects” OExpress, 12 March 2012, Vol 20 N°S2 © CEA. All rights reserved | 18 SW PN carrier depletion modulator Self-aligned carrier depletion modulator in 220nm Silicon-on-insulator Optical microscope image of fabricated device Waveguide 220nm X 400nm 100nm slab height 2um buried oxide layer 1um top cladding oxide A. Brimont, D. J. Thomson, P. Sanchis, J. Herrera, F.Y. Gardes, J. M. Fedeli, G. T. Reed, and J. Martí, "High speed silicon electro-optical modulators enhanced via slow light propagation," Opt. Express 19, 20876-20885 (2011) 500µm long CMOS compatible slow wave modulator Group index of only ~11 © CEA. All rights reserved Modulator ring PIPIN 10 Gbit/s ring modulator Ring radius of 50 µm => C ~0.08 pF Energy/bit ~ 0.7 pJ/bit PIPIN diode integrated in a 50µm radius ring resonator. VpLp product of 3V.cm for both TE and TM input light. Insertion loss lower than 1 dB 10 GBit/s operations were demonstrated with 5.6 and 5.1 dB Extinction Ratio. Rasigade, G.; Ziebell, M.; Marris-Morini, D.; Brimont, A.; Campo, A.M.G.; Sanchis, P.; Fedeli, J.; Duan, G.; Cassan, E.; Vivien, L.; , "10-Gb/s Error-Free Silicon Optical Modulator for Both TE and TM Polarized Light," Photonics Technology Letters, IEEE , vol.23, no.23, pp.1799-1801, Dec.1, 2011 © CEA. All rights reserved RAMZI PIPIN carrier depletion modulator Self-aligned carrier depletion modulator on 400nm Silicon-on-insulator Waveguide 400nm X 420nm 100nm slab height 2um buried oxide layer 1um top cladding oxide Optical microscope image of fabricated device Bandwidth of 19 GHz, Data transmission at 20Gbit/s with extinction ratio of 2.6dB, over a RF/optical interaction length of only 200µm Gutierrez, A.M.; Brimont, A.; Rasigade, G.; Ziebell, M.; Marris-Morini, D.; Fedeli, J.-M.; Vivien, L.; Marti, J.; Sanchis, P.; , "Ring-Assisted Mach–Zehnder Interferometer Silicon Modulator for Enhanced Performance," Lightwave Technology, Journal of , vol.30, no.1, pp.9-14, Jan.1, 2012 © CEA. All rights reserved Ge/SiGe QCSE devices Bias from 0 to 5V : Extinction Ratio (ER) > 6 dB for 20 nm range Energy to charge the device Energy/bit = 1/4C(Vpp)2 Energy dissipation of photocurrent Energy/bit = 1/B (IphVbias) C ~ 62 fF Energy/bit = 70 fJ/bit (for a voltage swing of 1 V , 20 GHz, 0.5 mW input power) 22 © CEA. All rights reserved The 2010 decade: High efficiency hybrid lasers | 23 © CEA. All rights reserved Hybrid Laser concept Gain III-V Heterostructure Si-circuit supports all optical functions Top view DBR III-V/Si active region N-contact P-contact Si waveguide Surface-grating coupler Mode transformer Feed-back R>90% R~50% InP Gain region To fiber Si waveguide Side view © CEA. All rights reserved Power vs current of a Fabry-Perot hybrid laser at 1.3 µm (InGaAlAs/InP) Threshold current of 12mA at room temperature for 500 µm devices Maximum out power at 20°C: 10 mW at CW conditions and 16 mW for I = 150 mA at pulse conditions Operating up to 80° at CW conditions Still reflections in the III-V/Si waveguide transition areas © CEA. All rights reserved State of the art on hybrid III-V/Si lasers (Feb 2013) III-V Lab/CEA LETI CEA LETI Monolithic InP lasers Intel/UCSB Type Si FP Si RRs Si FP Si DBR Si DBR Si DFB Si DBR DFB SG DBR Silicon waveguide thickness (nm) 440 440 440 500 500 500 500 / / Ith (mA) at 20°C 30 21 12 40 45 25 65 < 20 < 20 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.05 0.15 > 0.25 > 0.25 18 10 10 14 30 5.4 11 30 20 / 45 / >20 / 40 40 40 35 Tunability (nm) / 45 / / / / / / 40 T° max operation 60°C 60°C 90°C 60°C 90°C 50°C 45°C 90°C 90°C Active gain material (MQW) InGaAsP InGaAsP InGaAlAs InGaAsP InGaAlAs InGaAsP InGaAsP Wavelength (µm) 1.55 1.55 1.3 1.55 1.3 1.55 1.55 η (mW/mA) at 20°C Pmax (mW) at 20°C SMSR (dB) InGaAsP/ InGaAsP/ InGaAlAs InGaAlAs 1.3-1.55 1.55 © CEA. All rights reserved Green hybrid III-V/Si lasers Increase of the power efficiency and decrease of threshold current: Improve the III-V/Si taper transition efficiency Decrease the cavity losses: III-V waveguide losses, Bragg mirror losses, etc. Improve the thermal management Use of materials with better temperature behaviour InGaAlAs MQW at 1.3 µm QD materials (Comb laser) Use of smaller cavity length (around 100µm) Smaller DFB Ring laser cavity Page 27 © CEA. All rights reserved Microring hybrid laser 25 C 30 C … 70 C Threshold down to 0.5mA, but reduction of the efficiency Racket design in order to add the power of clockwise and counterclockwise modes 3.75µm radius disk, 60 nm coupling distance © CEA. All rights reserved Photonic-Electronic Integration | 29 © CEA. All rights reserved Rationale of Photonic- Electronic Integration Reduction of the length of electric connections between active photonic device and driving electronic device. Reduction of resistance and capacitance for higher RF performances Reduction of power consumption Feedback loops for the control of the photonic building blocks Reduction of the cost and the number of components with high volume manufacturing © CEA. All rights reserved Metallic Photonic Electronic Connection Die to Die connection (D2D) by wire bonding D2D with stud bumping (low number of pins) D2D with Flip-chip technology (high number of pins) D2D with Cu pillars (reduction of the size and Pb free) Cu-Cu bonding © CEA. All rights reserved Front side W2W fabrication with direct bonding W2W direct bonding of the electronic wafer and the photonic wafer without metallizations Removal of the SOI substrate Fabrication of the electrical connections between photonic active devices and electronic drivers Si rib waveguide Germanium AWG on CMOS Germanium PD Si waveguide TIA © CEA. All rights reserved Acknowledgements European projects: Collaborative program with More information on Silicon Photonics can be found in the new bible: © CEA. All rights reserved Thank you for your attention 2010: Energy/bit > 10 pJ/bit 2020:energy/bit << 100fJ/bit | 34 © CEA. All rights reserved Si Photonics various building blocks Passive devices (Waveguides, splitters, cavities, gratings, couplers,..) Rib, Strip, horizontal slot, vertical slot, multilayers waveguides SiOx, SiNx, cSi, aSi, InP on Si, SiGe, … and a mix of Photodetectors Ge on Si InGaAs on Si Si implanted Modulators Si capacitive, Si carrier injection, Si depletion SiGe/Ge Ge InP on Si Polymer Strain Laser sources InP on Si Ge nc Si © CEA. All rights reserved Driving electrical power http://silicon-photonics.ief.u-psud.fr/ Simulation for TB=0.05 ns (data rate =20 Gbit/s) U(t) U TB 0 VπL π t Static power dissipated in the device is negligible as reverse current is very low. C(U) 0.3 fF/µm Capacitance depends on the voltage. It has been approximated by its average value between 0 and U volts. 0.1 fF/µm 5V U © CEA. All rights reserved Power modulator . calculation of P = f x C x V^2 With C = 0.2 fF/µm, L = 4000 µm, V = 4 V et f = 10 GHz : Pmax=128 mW. At 40 GHz, Pmax= 512 mW. (charge+discharge). With random signal, it will divided by 2. In push-pull , voltage /2: P/4 . Energy/bit= CV2/4 © CEA. All rights reserved