79 research outputs found

    Edge Couplers with relaxed Alignment Tolerance for Pick-and-Place Hybrid Integration of III-V Lasers with SOI Waveguides

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    We report on two edge-coupling and power splitting devices for hybrid integration of III-V lasers with sub-micrometric silicon-on-insulator (SOI) waveguides. The proposed devices relax the horizontal alignment tolerances required to achieve high coupling efficiencies and are suitable for passively aligned assembly with pick-and-place tools. Light is coupled to two on-chip single mode SOI waveguides with almost identical power coupling efficiency, but with a varying relative phase accommodating the lateral misalignment between the laser diode and the coupling devices, and is suitable for the implementation of parallel optics transmitters. Experimental characterization with both a lensed fiber and a Fabry-P\'erot semiconductor laser diode has been performed. Excess insertion losses (in addition to the 3 dB splitting) taken as the worst case over both waveguides of respectively 2 dB and 3.1 dB, as well as excellent 1 dB horizontal loss misalignment ranges of respectively 2.8 um and 3.8 um (worst case over both in-plane axes) have been measured for the two devices. Back-reflections to the laser are below -20 dB for both devices within the 1 dB misalignment range. Devices were fabricated with 193 nm DUV optical lithography and are compatible with mass-manufacturing with mainstream CMOS technology

    Semiconductor laser mode locking stabilization with optical feedback from a silicon PIC

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    Semiconductor mode-locked lasers can be used in a variety of applications ranging from multi-carrier sources for WDM communication systems to time base references for metrology. Their packaging in compact chip- or module-level systems remains however burdened by their strong sensitivity to back-reflections, quickly destroying the coherence of the mode-locking. Here, we investigate the stabilization of mode-locked lasers directly edge coupled to a silicon photonic integrated circuit, with the objective of moving isolators downstream to the output of the photonic circuit. A 2.77 kHz 3 dB RF linewidth, substantially improved compared to the 15.01 kHz of the free running laser, is obtained in the best case. Even in presence of detrimental reflections from the photonic circuit, substantial linewidth reductions from 20 kHz to 8.82 kHz, from 572 kHz to 14.8 kHz, and from 1.5 MHz to 40 kHz are realized

    Modeling of an efficient singlet-triplet spin qubit to photon interface assisted by a photonic crystal cavity

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    Efficient interconnection between distant semiconductor spin qubits with the help of photonic qubits would offer exciting new prospects for future quantum communication applications. In this paper, we optimize the extraction efficiency of a novel interface between a singlet-triplet spin qubit and a photonic qubit. The interface is based on a 220 nm thick GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructure membrane and consists of a gate-defined double quantum dot (GDQD) supporting a singlet-triplet qubit, an optically active quantum dot (OAQD) consisting of a gate-defined exciton trap, a photonic crystal cavity providing in-plane optical confinement and efficient out-coupling to an ideal free space Gaussian beam while accommodating the gate wiring of the GDQD and OAQD, and a bottom gold reflector to recycle photons and increase the optical extraction efficiency. All essential components can be lithographically defined and deterministically fabricated on the GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructure membrane, which greatly increases the scalability of on-chip integration. According to our simulations, the interface provides an overall coupling efficiency of 28.7% into a free space Gaussian beam, assuming an SiO2 interlayer filling the space between the reflector and the membrane. The performance can be further increased by undercutting this SiO2 interlayer below the photonic crystal. In this case, the overall efficiency is calculated to be 48.5%
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