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Recent progress
in lasers on silicon
Hyun-Yong Jung
High-Speed Circuits and Systems Laboratory
Outline
Fundamentals
Silicon Raman lasers
Epitaxial lasers on silicon
Hybrid silicon lasers
Challenges and opportunities
Fundamentals
In direct bandgap materials
In indirect bandgap materials
- GaAs, InP, for example
•
Lowest energy points of both the
conduction & valence bands line
up vertically in the wave vector
axis
- Si, Ge
•
Free electrons tend to reside X
valley of the conduction band,
which is not aligned with free holes
in the valence band
Fundamentals
In indirect bandgap materials
• Auger recombination
- An electron (or hole) is excited to a higher energy level by absorbing
the released energy from an electron-hole recombination
- Rate increases with injected free-carrier density & inversely
proportional to the bandgap
• Free-carrier absorption (FCA)
- The free electrons in the conduction band can jump to higher energy
levels by absorbing photons
The elctrons pumped to higher energy levels release
their energy through phonons
Fundamentals
Availability of nanotechnology
Breaking the crystal-symmetry or crystalline Si
A number of groups have reported enhanced
light-emmiting efficiency & optical gain in low
dimentional Si at low temperatures
- Porous Si, Si nanocrystals, Si-on-insulator(SOI) superlattices,
Nanopillars……
Achieving room-temperature continuous-wave lasing
remains a challenge!!
Fundamentals
Advantages of Si for a good substrate
Si wafers are incredibly pure & have low defect density
32 nm CMOS technology is sufficienty advanced to fabricate
Si has a high thermal conductivity, which is a very useful
characteristic for an active device substrate
SiO2 serves as a protective layer and a naturally good optical
waveguide cladding
Silicon Raman lasers
Raman Scattering (or Raman effect)
Inelastic scattering of a photon by an optical phonon
A small fraction of the scattered light(≈1/𝟏𝟎𝟕)
Raman gain coefficient in Si is around five orders of
magnitude larger than that in amorphous glass fibres
Si waveguide loss is also several orders of magnitude
higher than in glass fibres
Two-photon absorption(TPA)
A nonlinear loss mechanism in which two photons combine their
energies to boost an electron in the valence band to the conduction
band
TPA increases with the number of photons in a waveguide
A limiting factor when using high optical pump powers
Silicon Raman lasers
Overcoming the TPA-induced FCA
A high Racetrack ring resonator Cavity
A large bend radius helps to minimize
waveguide bending losses
The directional coupler is designed to
utilize the pump power efficiently and
achieve a low lasing threshold
TPA-induced FCA nonlinear optical loss can also
reduced by optimizing the p-i-n reverse-biased diode
Silicon Raman lasers nenefit significantly from high
spectral purity!!
Epitaxial lasers on silicon
Compared with Si, GaAs and InP have lattice mismatches
and thermal expansion coefficient mismatches
Reducing by special surface treatment (strained superlatiices, lowtemperature buffers & growth on patterned substrates)
Advanced epitaxial techniques with SiGe & GaSb buffer layers
- The realization of GaAs-based CW diode lasers on Si substrates at
room temperature
Ge-on-Si(or SiGe-on-Si) epitxial growth
- Key photonic components from this material system have
demonstrated performances comparable or even better than their III-V
counterparts in certain aspects
Epitaxial lasers on silicon
Germanium has an indirect band structure
! Energy gap from the top of the valence band to the momentumaligned Γ valley is close to the actual band gap!
The tensile strain is able to reduce the energy difference
between the Γand L valleys
Strain raises the light-hole band, which increases optical gain
for high injection
These techniques have enabled room-temperature directbandgap electroluminescence and CW room temperature
optically pumped operation of Ge-on-Si lasers
Optically pumped Ge-on-Si laser
demonstrating CW operation at
room temperature!!
Hybrid silicon lasers
It is possible to combine epitaxial films with low threading
dislocation densities to the lattice-mismatched Si substrate
Advantages over bonding individual III-V lasers to a SOI host
substrate
The onfinement factor can be
dramatically changed by changing
the wave guide width
Hybrid silicon lasers
Small size, low power consumption and a short cavity design
are all critical for optical interconnects
a schematic of an electrically pumped microring resonator
laser, its cross-section SEM image
Hybrid silicon lasers
By lasing inside a compact microdisk III-V cavity and
coupling to an external Si waveguide, a good overlap
between the optical mode and electrical gain results
Schematic of a heterogeneously integrated III-V
microdisk laser with a vertically coupled SOI wave
guide
Results from combining four devices with
diameters
Increasing thermal impedance causes laser
performance to decrease dramatically with
smaller diameters A major hurdle in the
realization of compact devices
Challenges and opportunities
Opportunities
Optical interconnects could be a possible solution
Achieving smaller interconnect delays, lower crosstalk & better
resistance to electromagnetic interference
Integration with CMOS circuits can provide low cost, integrated
control, signals processing and error correction
power consumption must be reduced to 2 pJ bit -1 or lower
Silicon Raman lasers are potentially ideal light sources for a variety
of wavelength-sensitive regimes
Raman lasers will be very competitive in size and cost if a pump
source can be integrated