Italiano

Innovating Photonics: Lithium Tantalate Provides Power for the Next Generation of Optoelectronic Circuits

198
2024-05-14 14:05:19
Vedi traduzione

The new photonic integrated circuit technology based on lithium tantalate has improved cost efficiency and scalability, making significant progress in the fields of optical communication and computing.

The rapid development of photonic integrated circuits (PICs) has revolutionized optical communication and computing systems, combining multiple optical devices and functions on a single chip.

For decades, silicon-based PICs have dominated the field due to their cost-effectiveness and integration with existing semiconductor manufacturing technologies, despite their limitations in electro-optic modulation bandwidth. Nevertheless, silicon optical transceiver chips on insulators have been successfully commercialized, driving information flow through millions of glass fibers in modern data centers.

Emerging lithium niobate platform
Recently, the lithium niobate wafer platform on insulators has become a high-quality material for photonic integrated electro-optic modulators due to its strong Pockels coefficient, which is crucial for high-speed optical modulation. However, high costs and complex production requirements have hindered the wider adoption of lithium niobate, limiting its commercial integration.

Lithium tantalate (LiTaO 3) is a close relative of lithium niobate and has the potential to overcome these obstacles. It has similar excellent electro-optical quality, but has advantages in scalability and cost compared to lithium niobate, as it has been widely used in 5G RF filters in the telecommunications industry.

Now, scientists led by Professor Tobias J. Kippenberg from the Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne and Professor Ou Xin from the Shanghai Institute of Microsystems and Information Technology (SIMIT) have created a new type of PIC platform based on lithium tantalate. PIC utilizes the inherent advantages of materials to make high-quality PIC more economically feasible, thereby changing the field. This breakthrough was published in the May 8th issue of Nature magazine.

Innovation in manufacturing technology
Researchers have developed a lithium tantalate wafer bonding method that is compatible with silicon on insulator production lines. Then, they covered the thin film lithium tantalate chip with diamond-like carbon and continued to etch the optical waveguide, modulator, and ultra-high quality factor microresonator.

Etching is achieved by combining deep ultraviolet (DUV) lithography with dry etching technology, which was originally developed for lithium niobate and then carefully adjusted to etch harder and more inert lithium tantalate. This adjustment involves optimizing etching parameters to minimize optical losses, which is a key factor in achieving high-performance photonic circuits.

Achievements and Future Prospects
Through this method, the team was able to manufacture efficient lithium tantalate PIC with an optical loss rate of only 5.6 dB/m at telecommunication wavelengths. Another highlight is the electro-optic Mach Zehnder modulator (MZM), which is a widely used device in high-speed fiber optic communication today. The half wave voltage length product of lithium tantalate MZM is 1.9 V cm, and the electro-optic bandwidth reaches 40 GHz.

"While maintaining efficient electro-optical performance, we have also generated soliton micro combs on this platform," said Chengli Wang, the first author of the study. "These soliton micro combs have a large number of coherent frequencies, making them particularly suitable for applications such as parallel coherent lidar and photon computing when combined with electro-optical modulation functions."

The birefringence (dependence of refractive index on optical polarization and propagation direction) of lithium tantalate PIC is reduced, enabling dense circuit configurations and ensuring broad operational capabilities in all telecommunications frequency bands. This work paves the way for the scalable, cost-effective manufacturing of advanced optoelectronic PICs.

Source: Laser Net

Raccomandazioni correlate
  • Narrow band tunable terahertz lasers may change material research and technology

    A group of researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Material Structure and Dynamics in Germany explored the effect of manipulating the properties of quantum materials far from equilibrium through customized laser drivers. They found a more effective method to create previously observed metastable superconducting states in fullerene based materials using lasers.By tuning the light source to 10...

    2023-11-21
    Vedi traduzione
  • New type of "dynamic static dual sensing" charge coupled phototransistor

    With the development of cutting-edge technologies such as automatic guidance and embodied intelligence, machine vision has put forward higher requirements for image acquisition, requiring precise recording of static images and the ability to sensitively capture dynamic changes in the scene. The existing dynamic and active pixel sensor technology integrates two functions: dynamic event detection an...

    04-17
    Vedi traduzione
  • Researchers improve laser behavior by tying laser knots

    Researchers have created a new type of laser that, despite environmental noise and manufacturing defects, still performs as expected. Technically speaking, researchers have created a topology, time, and mode-locked laser. This study has the potential to improve sensors and computing hardware.A mode-locked laser emits light with regular pulses instead of a continuous beam. Pulses can be very counta...

    2024-03-07
    Vedi traduzione
  • Researchers have proposed a new idea for quasi particle driven ultra bright light sources, which can be used in various applications from non-destructive imaging to chip manufacturing

    An international team of scientists is rethinking the fundamental principles of radiation physics, aiming to create ultra bright light sources. In a new study published in Nature Photonics, researchers from the Higher Institute of Technology in Lisbon, Portugal, the University of Rochester, the University of California, Los Angeles, and the Optical Applications Laboratory in France proposed the us...

    2023-10-24
    Vedi traduzione
  • Yongxin Optics: Launch of the "Multimodal Nanoresolution Microscope" Project

    Recently, the launch and implementation plan demonstration meeting of the "Multimodal Nano Resolution Microscope" project led by Ningbo Yongxin Optics Co., Ltd. was successfully held in Ningbo. This is the fourth time Yongxin Optics has led a national key research and development plan project and received support, indicating that the company's ability to undertake national level technological rese...

    04-10
    Vedi traduzione