Document Version Publisher s PDF, also known as Version of Record (includes final page, issue and volume numbers)

Similar documents
Bias-free, low power and optically driven membrane InP switch on SOI for remotely configurable photonic packet switches

Passive InP regenerator integrated on SOI for the support of broadband silicon modulators

DBR based passively mode-locked 1.5m semiconductor laser with 9 nm tuning range Moskalenko, V.; Williams, K.A.; Bente, E.A.J.M.

Ultracompact Adiabatic Bi-sectional Tapered Coupler for the Si/III-V Heterogeneous Integration

A 3.9 ns 8.9 mw 4 4 Silicon Photonic Switch Hybrid-Integrated with CMOS Driver

Grating coupled photonic crystal demultiplexer with integrated detectors on InPmembrane

Integrated photonic circuit in silicon on insulator for Fourier domain optical coherence tomography

Silicon Photonics Technology Platform To Advance The Development Of Optical Interconnects

Heinrich-Hertz-Institut Berlin

Published in: Proceedings of the 20th Annual Symposium of the IEEE Photonics Benelux Chapter, November 2015, Brussels, Belgium

CHAPTER 2 POLARIZATION SPLITTER- ROTATOR BASED ON A DOUBLE- ETCHED DIRECTIONAL COUPLER

A thin foil optical strain gage based on silicon-on-insulator microresonators

Optics Communications

All-Optical Wavelength Conversion Using Mode Switching in an InP Microdisc Laser

Compact wavelength router based on a Silicon-on-insulator arrayed waveguide grating pigtailed to a fiber array

Reconfigurable optical backbone network architecture for indoor wireless communication Mekonnen, K.A.; Tangdiongga, E.; Koonen, A.M.J.

Slot waveguide microring modulator on InP membrane

High bit-rate combined FSK/IM modulated optical signal generation by using GCSR tunable laser sources

Published in: Proceedings of the 36th European Conference and Exhibition on Optical Communication, ECOC 2010, September 19-23, 2010, Torino, Italy

On-chip two-mode division multiplexing using tapered directional coupler-based mode multiplexer and demultiplexer

Hybrid vertical-cavity laser integration on silicon

IBM T. J. Watson Research Center IBM Corporation

S-band gain-clamped grating-based erbiumdoped fiber amplifier by forward optical feedback technique

Figure 1 Basic waveguide structure

Fiber-wireless links supporting high-capacity W-band channels

An integrated recirculating optical buffer

High-Resolution AWG-based fiber bragg grating interrogator Pustakhod, D.; Kleijn, E.; Williams, K.A.; Leijtens, X.J.M.

Heterogenous integration of InP/InGaAsP photodetectors onto ultracompact Silicon-on-Insulator waveguide circuits

Performance of silicon micro ring modulator with an interleaved p-n junction for optical interconnects

InP-based Waveguide Photodetector with Integrated Photon Multiplication

Silicon photonic devices based on binary blazed gratings

Cost-effective CMOS-compatible grating couplers with backside metal mirror and 69% coupling efficiency

High-Power Semiconductor Laser Amplifier for Free-Space Communication Systems

Index. Cambridge University Press Silicon Photonics Design Lukas Chrostowski and Michael Hochberg. Index.

Silicon Carrier-Depletion-Based Mach-Zehnder and Ring Modulators with Different Doping Patterns for Telecommunication and Optical Interconnect

NEXT GENERATION SILICON PHOTONICS FOR COMPUTING AND COMMUNICATION PHILIPPE ABSIL

Lecture: Integration of silicon photonics with electronics. Prepared by Jean-Marc FEDELI CEA-LETI

Photonic Integrated Circuits Made in Berlin

Low Thermal Resistance Flip-Chip Bonding of 850nm 2-D VCSEL Arrays Capable of 10 Gbit/s/ch Operation

IEEE JOURNAL OF SELECTED TOPICS IN QUANTUM ELECTRONICS 2010 Silicon Photonic Circuits: On-CMOS Integration, Fiber Optical Coupling, and Packaging

Semiconductor Optical Active Devices for Photonic Networks

On-chip interrogation of a silicon-on-insulator microring resonator based ethanol vapor sensor with an arrayed waveguide grating (AWG) spectrometer

Investigation of ultrasmall 1 x N AWG for SOI- Based AWG demodulation integration microsystem

Hybrid Integration Technology of Silicon Optical Waveguide and Electronic Circuit

All-optical logic based on silicon micro-ring resonators

High-efficiency fiber-to-chip grating couplers realized using an advanced CMOS-compatible Silicon-On-Insulator platform

Performance Analysis of SOA-MZI based All-Optical AND & XOR Gate

On-chip antenna integration for single-chip millimeterwave FMCW radars Adela, B.B.; Pual, P.T.M; Smolders, A.B.

Spatial Investigation of Transverse Mode Turn-On Dynamics in VCSELs

Compact two-mode (de)multiplexer based on symmetric Y-junction and Multimode interference waveguides

A 13.56MHz RFID system based on organic transponders

Silicon photonics with low loss and small polarization dependency. Timo Aalto VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland

An Amplified WDM-PON Using Broadband Light Source Seeded Optical Sources and a Novel Bidirectional Reach Extender

Silicon photonics on 3 and 12 μm thick SOI for optical interconnects Timo Aalto VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland

Heterogeneously Integrated Microwave Signal Generators with Narrow- Linewidth Lasers

Si and InP Integration in the HELIOS project

A WDM passive optical network enabling multicasting with color-free ONUs

Demonstration of Silicon-on-insulator midinfrared spectrometers operating at 3.8μm

Putting PICs in Products A Practical Guideline. Katarzyna Ławniczuk

Comparison of AWGs and Echelle Gratings for Wavelength Division Multiplexing on Silicon-on-Insulator

To investigate effects of extinction ratio on SOA based wavelength Converters for all Optical Networks

Dries Van Thourhout IPRM 08, Paris

Wavelength-Multiplexed Duplex Transceiver Based on III-V/Si Hybrid Integration for Off-Chip and On-Chip Optical Interconnects

Realization of Polarization-Insensitive Optical Polymer Waveguide Devices

High-efficiency, high-speed VCSELs with deep oxidation layers

Loss Reduction in Silicon Nanophotonic Waveguide Micro-bends Through Etch Profile Improvement

Flip-Chip Integration of 2-D 850 nm Backside Emitting Vertical Cavity Laser Diode Arrays

Optical Fiber Technology

Convergence Challenges of Photonics with Electronics

Winter College on Optics: Fundamentals of Photonics - Theory, Devices and Applications February 2014

Fabrication of High-Speed Resonant Cavity Enhanced Schottky Photodiodes

Miniature Mid-Infrared Thermooptic Switch with Photonic Crystal Waveguide Based Silicon-on-Sapphire Mach Zehnder Interferometers

Photo-Electronic Crossbar Switching Network for Multiprocessor Systems

Fully-Etched Grating Coupler with Low Back Reflection

Near/Mid-Infrared Heterogeneous Si Photonics

Experimental demonstration of both inverted and non-inverted wavelength conversion based on transient cross phase modulation of SOA

A Fully Integrated 20 Gb/s Optoelectronic Transceiver Implemented in a Standard

Contents Silicon Photonic Wire Waveguides: Fundamentals and Applications

All Optical Universal logic Gates Design and Simulation using SOA

InP-based Waveguide Photodetector with Integrated Photon Multiplication

Impact of the light coupling on the sensing properties of photonic crystal cavity modes Kumar Saurav* a,b, Nicolas Le Thomas a,b,

Si Photonics Technology Platform for High Speed Optical Interconnect. Peter De Dobbelaere 9/17/2012

A Low-loss Integrated Beam Combiner based on Polarization Multiplexing

Silicon-on-insulator spectrometers with integrated GaInAsSb photodiodes for wide-band spectroscopy from 1510 to 2300 nm

City, University of London Institutional Repository

Simulation of All-Optical XOR, AND, OR gate in Single Format by Using Semiconductor Optical Amplifiers

Fabrication tolerant polarization splitter and rotator based on a tapered directional coupler

2D silicon-based surface-normal vertical cavity photonic crystal waveguide array for high-density optical interconnects

Gigabit Transmission in 60-GHz-Band Using Optical Frequency Up-Conversion by Semiconductor Optical Amplifier and Photodiode Configuration

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

Nanophotonics for low latency optical integrated circuits

Applications of Cladding Stress Induced Effects for Advanced Polarization Control in Silicon Photonics

Non-blocking switching unit based on nested silicon microring resonators with high extinction ratios and low crosstalks

High-speed Ge photodetector monolithically integrated with large cross silicon-on-insulator waveguide

ISSCC 2006 / SESSION 13 / OPTICAL COMMUNICATION / 13.7

Silicon Photonic Device Based on Bragg Grating Waveguide

Compact hybrid TM-pass polarizer for silicon-on-insulator platform

Integration of Optoelectronic and RF Devices for Applications in Optical Interconnect and Wireless Communication

CMOS-compatible highly efficient polarization splitter and rotator based on a double-etched directional coupler

Silicon Photonics: A Platform for Integration, Wafer Level Assembly and Packaging

Transcription:

Bias-free, low power and optically driven membrane InP switch on SOI for remotely configurable photonic packet switches Tassaert, M.; Roelkens, G.C.; Dorren, H.J.S.; Thourhout, Van, D.; Raz, O. Published in: Optics Express DOI:.1364/OE.19.00B817 Published: 01/01/2011 Document Version Publisher s PDF, also known as Version of Record (includes final page, issue and volume numbers) Please check the document version of this publication: A submitted manuscript is the author's version of the article upon submission and before peer-review. There can be important differences between the submitted version and the official published version of record. People interested in the research are advised to contact the author for the final version of the publication, or visit the DOI to the publisher's website. The final author version and the galley proof are versions of the publication after peer review. The final published version features the final layout of the paper including the volume, issue and page numbers. Link to publication Citation for published version (APA): Tassaert, M., Roelkens, G., Dorren, H. J. S., Thourhout, Van, D., & Raz, O. (2011). Bias-free, low power and optically driven membrane InP switch on SOI for remotely configurable photonic packet switches. Optics Express, 19(26), B817-B824. DOI:.1364/OE.19.00B817 General rights Copyright and moral rights for the publications made accessible in the public portal are retained by the authors and/or other copyright owners and it is a condition of accessing publications that users recognise and abide by the legal requirements associated with these rights. Users may download and print one copy of any publication from the public portal for the purpose of private study or research. You may not further distribute the material or use it for any profit-making activity or commercial gain You may freely distribute the URL identifying the publication in the public portal? Take down policy If you believe that this document breaches copyright please contact us providing details, and we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate your claim. Download date: 04. Dec. 2018

Bias-free, low power and optically driven membrane InP switch on SOI for remotely configurable photonic packet switches M. Tassaert, 1, G. Roelkens, 1 H. J. S. Dorren, 2 D. Van Thourhout, 1 and O. Raz 2 1 Photonics Research Group - Ghent University/imec, Sint-Pietersnieuwstraat 41, 9000 Gent, Belgium 2 Eindhoven University of Technology, Den Dolech 2, 5600MB, Eindhoven, The Netherlands martijn.tassaert@intec.ugent.be Abstract: A small footprint integrated Membrane InP Switch (MIPS) on Silicon-On-Insulator (SOI) is demonstrated for use in all-optical packet switching. The device consists of an optically pumped III-V membrane waveguide of only 0 nm thick, coupled to the underlying SOI waveguide circuit. Because of its limited thickness, the optical confinement in the active layers is maximized, allowing for high extinction ratio of over 30 db when applying a low power optical pump signal, over the entire C-band. The switch has 400/1300 ps on/off switching times and no measurable pattern dependence or switching related power penalties for a bitrate up to 40Gb/s, using a switching power of only 2dBm. 2011 Optical Society of America OCIS codes: (130.0130) Integrated optics; (130.4815) Optical switching devices; (060.6719) Switching, packet. References and links 1. www.cisco.com/en/us/docs/routers/crs/hardware doc/roadmap/17014hdg.html. 2. S. J. Ben Yoo, Optical packet and burst switching technologies for the future photonic Internet, J. Lightwave Technol. 24, 4468 4492 (2006). 3. R. S. Tucker, Scalability and energy consumption of optical and electronic packet switching, J. Lightwave Technol. 29, 1 12 (2011). 4. I. M. Soganci, T. Tanemura, K. A. Williams, N. Calabretta, T. De Vries, E. Smalbrugge, M. K. Smit, H. Dorren, and Y. Nakano, Monolithically integrated InP 1x16 optical switch with wavelength-insensitive operation, IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett. 22, 143 145 (20). 5. A. Albores-Mejia, F. Gomez-Agis, H. J. S. Dorren, X. J. M. Leijtens, T. de Vries, Y.-S. Oei, M. J. R. Heck, R. Notzel, D. J. Robbins, M. K. Smit, and K. A. Williams, Monolithic multistage optoelectronic switch circuit routing 160 Gb/s line-rate data, J. Lightwave Technol. 28, 2984 2992 (20). 6. A. Bianco, D. Cuda, R. Gaudino, G. Gavilanes, F. Neri, and M. Petracca, Scalability of optical interconnects based on microring resonators, IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett. 22, 81 83 (20). 7. N. Calabretta, H. Jung, J. Lorente, E. Tangdiongga, T. Koonen, and H. Dorren, All-optical techniques enabling packet switching with label processing and label rewriting, J. Telecommun. Inf. Technol., 20 28 (2009). 8. J. E. Sharping, M. Fiorentino, P. Kumar, and R. S. Windeler, All-optical switching based on cross-phase modulation in microstructure fiber, IEEE Photon. Technol. Let. 14, 77 79 (2002). 9. W. Bogaerts, L. Liu, S. Selvaraja, J. Brouckaert, D. Taillaert, D. Vermeulen, G. Roelkens, D. Van Thourhout, and R. Baets, Silicon nanophotonic waveguides and their applications, Proc. SPIE 7134, 71341O (2008).. G. Roelkens, J. Brouckaert, D. Van Thourhout, R. Baets, R. Notzel, and M. Smit, Adhesive bonding of InP/InGaAsP dies to processed silicon-on-insulator wafers using dvs-bis-benzocyclobutene, J. Electrochem. Soc. 153, G15 G19 (2006). 12 December 2011 / Vol. 19, No. 26 / OPTICS EXPRESS B817

11. G. Roelkens, L. Liu, D. Liang, R. Jones, A. Fang, B. Koch, and J. Bowers, III-V/silicon photonics for on-chip and inter-chip optical interconnects, Laser Photon. Rev. 4, 751 779 (20). 12. M. Tassaert, S. Keyvaninia, D. Van Thourhout, W. M. J. Green, Y. Vlasov, and G. Roelkens, A nanophotonic InP/InGaAlAs optical amplifier integrated on a silicon-on-insulator waveguide circuit, in Proceedings of IEEE Conference on Information Photonics (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Ottawa, 2011), pp. 1-2. 13. D. Taillaert, F. Van Laere, M. Ayre, W. Bogaerts, D. Van Thourhout, P. Bienstman, and R. Baets, Grating couplers for coupling between optical fibers and nanophotonic waveguides, Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. Part 1-Regul. Pap. Brief Commun. 45, 6071 6077 (2006). 14. www.epixfab.eu. 15. F. Doany, B. Lee, S. Assefa, W. Green, M. Yang, C. Schow, C. Jahnes, S. Zhang, J. Singer, V. Kopp, J. Kash, and Y. Vlasov, Multichannel high-bandwidth coupling of ultra-dense silicon photonic waveguide array to standardpitch fiber array, J. Lightwave Technol. 29, 475 482 (2011). 1. Introduction Since the beginning of the Internet Age, the number of connected hosts and used bandwidth have been growing exponentially. This trend is still continuing with the onset of bandwidth demanding services as video-on-demand and cloud computing. Most of this data is sent using the Internet Protocol (IP) which bundles the data in small packets each containing a header with an address, so that each packet can find its way to the right destination. In each node where several optical channels meet, a routing system converts the optically transmitted data to the electrical domain where the address information is read, deciphered and the data packet is routed along the right optical link. Due to the continuing increase in transmitted data, these systems are growing in both floor space and power consumption [1]. Much of this growth can be attributed to the large amount of power and space needed for the forwarding engines which include the conversion of optical packets to the electrical domain and back again. This is the reason why a large research effort has been put into building an all-optical packet switch that could replace its electrical counterpart in recent years. Both pure all-optical and hybrid electro-optic solutions have been investigated [2, 3]. On the hybrid front, various switch architectures have been investigated which either use electrically driven phase shifters [4], semiconductor optical amplifiers (SOAs) [5] or microring resonators [6]. Effort has also been put into building all-optical systems. In these demonstrations the phase or resonance condition of a device was changed by an external optical signal to obtain switching of the data signal. There have been demonstrations using electrically biased integrated devices based on Mach Zehnder Interferometers (MZIs) and SOAs [7] and unbiased fiber based switches which are using fiber non-linearities for the switching operation and therefore require very high optical powers [8]. Although these solutions are all-optical, their power consumption is still comparable to state-of-the-art electrical switching, with a significant contribution due to driving circuits, electrical bias and operating power of the individual switching components [3]. The integration of an all-optical switch made in a bonded III-V membrane layer on top of the SOI waveguide platform would allow for the creation of more complex circuits, including active and passive devices, which are necessary for the realization of complex packet switches [9]. Integration of the III-V membrane can be achieved via adhesive die-to-wafer bonding using DVS-BCB as an intermediate adhesive []. Using this integration method several electrically pumped lasers and amplifiers have already been demonstrated [11]. In these approaches, the active III-V waveguide is at least 500 nm thick, to ensure efficient electrical pumping of the device. This limits the maximal confinement one can achieve in the active layers, increasing the required device s length to achieve a sufficiently high extinction ratio (ER) and therefore also the power consumption. If only optical excitation of the gain medium were used however, current injection layers and ohmic contacts would no longer be required, reducing the required III-V waveguide thickness. As a result, this allows for the use of the high index contrast be- 12 December 2011 / Vol. 19, No. 26 / OPTICS EXPRESS B818

tween the III-V layers and the surrounding DVS-BCB cladding layer to create III-V membrane waveguides which have a much higher confinement in the active layers. In this article, we propose to use an optically pumped ultra-thin (< 0 nm) Membrane InP Switch (MIPS) within a broadcast-and-select switching architecture on the SOI waveguide platform as a complementary device in the heterogeneous integration tool box to solve many of the issues hindering the adaptation of all-optical packet switches. In this demonstration we highlight the switching performance of a single MIPS device which can be optically driven using a low power switching signal (< 2 mw) between high absorption and transparency with more than 30 db extinction ratio and rise and fall times measuring 400 and 1300 ps respectively. Switching of 20 and 40Gb/s NRZ-OOK data packets was accomplished with the switch showing no pattern dependence or any power penalty related to the switch operation. The paper is arranged as follows. In section 2 we introduce the general switch architecture which will make use of the MIPS. Section 3 is devoted to the device layout and fabrication. Section 4 gives static and dynamic switching characterization results while section 5 gives first experimental results of the operation of the MIPS in the context of all-optical packet switching. We conclude the paper in section 6 with some discussion and conclusions. 2. Switching architecture In Fig. 1 the proposed switch architecture is schematically shown for a 1 m packet switch. It is a common broadcast-and-select architecture, with a MIPS as the switching element. To drive the switches all-optically, a scheme is proposed in which the label processor extracts the outof-band labels, filters them using an Arrayed Waveguide Grating (AWG) and then recombines them using a MZI, with one of the m copies of the data packet at the input of one of the m switches. By using m of these blocks, a m m packet switch can be made [3]. Note that the label extraction can be done at a remote location, as the generated labels are low-power optical signals. MZI input MZI data 1xm splitter 1xm labels DEMUX (AWG) label processor m outputs Switch (MIPS) Fig. 1. Proposed packet switch architecture of a 1 m switch. 3. Device layout and fabrication The device layout is schematically shown in Fig. 2. It consists of a 0nm thick III-V membrane waveguide which is coupled to two underlying silicon access waveguides using two inverted taper couplers. In such an inverted taper coupler, a 220 nm thick silicon waveguide tapers linearly over a length of 18 μm from a starting width of 700nm down to a width of 0nm, while the III-V membrane waveguide on top tapers linearly from a width of 0.5 μm to a width of 1.4 μm. The coupler is designed to allow an adiabatic transition from the fundamental TEmode in the silicon waveguide to the fundamental TE-mode in the III-V membrane waveguide. The III-V waveguide has the structure of a rib waveguide with a width of 1.4 μm. It is made by shallow etching a bonded III-V epitaxial layer stack, which consists of three 8 nm thick 12 December 2011 / Vol. 19, No. 26 / OPTICS EXPRESS B819

III-V membrane rib waveguide InP 0 nm 69 nm 3xQW InP Si Coupling section 25 nm 300 nm DVS-BCB Silicon access waveguide Fig. 2. Schematic view of the device. It consists of two access waveguides, which are coupled to a III-V membrane waveguide using two inverted taper couplers. The mode profile in the III-V membrane waveguide. The high intensity in the quantum well layers is clearly visible. 20 nm 22 mm III-V 1.4 mm DVS-BCB 500 nm tip 93 nm 260 nm Si Fig. 3. An SEM image of a 50 μ m and a 0 μ m long device. SEM image of a cross section through the tapered part. InGaAs quantum wells, separated by nm thick InP barrier layers. This quantum well stack is sandwiched between two 25 nm thick InP cladding layers. The band gap wavelength for this configuration was determined to be 1.58 μ m. A rib waveguide structure is favored over a strip waveguide because the shallow etched cladding layers form a path along which dissipated heat can escape, significantly reducing the thermal resistance of the device [12]. The mode profile in the III-V rib waveguide is shown in Fig. 2 for a remaining cladding thickness of 25 nm. The high intensity in the quantum well layers is clearly visible and a confinement of 0.17 is reached in the active layers. Thanks to this very high confinement, a high ER is possible with a short device length. Furthermore, as only three quantum wells are used, the device can be saturated using a low pump power. The device is coupled to optical input/output fibers through two grating couplers, which show a coupling loss of 6.5 db per coupler at a peak wavelength of 1530 nm and a 3 db bandwidth of 70 nm [13]. Fabrication of the SOI waveguide circuits was done using a 193 nm deep UV lithography stepper and dry etching on a 200 mm wafer in a CMOS pilot-line [14]. After dicing of the SOI #157156 - $15.00 USD Received 1 Nov 2011; revised 30 Nov 2011; accepted 1 Dec 2011; published 6 Dec 2011 12 December 2011 / Vol. 19, No. 26 / OPTICS EXPRESS B820

wafer, the seperate dies are cleaned in a standard clean-1 solution for 15 minutes. In the mean time, the III-V dies are prepared for bonding by removal of the InP/InGaAs sacrificial layer pair, using HCl and a 1H 2 SO 4 :1H 2 O 2 :18H 2 O solution respectively. To improve adhesion to the DVS-BCB adhesive layer, a thin layer of nm of SiO 2 is deposited on the III-V dies. After this, a DVS-BCB solution diluted with mesitylene (5BCB:9Mes) is spincoated on the SOI dies. After evaporation of the mesitylene, the dies are brought into close contact in a controlled environment using a bonding pressure of 1.25MPa and cured for one hour at 240C. After the bonding of the dies, the InP substrate is removed using a combination of mechanical grinding and chemical etching using HCl until the InGaAs etch stop layer is reached. Subsequently the etch stop layer is removed using a 1H 2 SO 4 :1H 2 O 2 :18H 2 O solution and a 0nm thick SiO 2 hard mask is deposited. This hard mask is patterned using contact lithography to create the core of the rib waveguide. After dry etching the hard mask, the bonded III-V film is etched until 20nm remains in the etched parts. Afterwards, another contact lithography step is performed to define the III-V islands and the remaining 20nm is etched using a NaClO 3 :HCl:CH 3 COOH:H 2 O solution, which is an isotropic etch mixture for InP and InGaAs. In Fig. 3 a Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) image of the resulting devices is shown and in Fig. 3 a SEM image of the cross section through one of the taper structures is shown. From this image it can be seen that the DVS-BCB bonding layer thickness is 260nm in the trenches of the 220nm thick silicon waveguides, leading to a thickness of only 40 nm between the two coupled waveguides. The two structures were misaligned by 200nm which is within the margin to have good coupling. 4. Device characterization 4.1. Extinction ratio To determine the maximal ER our MIPS can deliver, we performed a continuous wave (CW) pump-probe experiment. In this experiment a CW pump beam at 1505 nm was combined with a CW probe beam using a 99/1 combiner and sent through the device. By comparing the probe transmission to the transmission through a reference silicon waveguide, the device absorption net gain (db) 0 - -20-30 -40-50 ER = 43 db -20 no pump -2.5 dbm 0.5 dbm -40 4.5 dbm power (dbm) -60-80 30 db -60 1530 1540 1550 1560 1570 Probe wavelength (nm) 1470 15 1550 1590 Wavelength (nm) Fig. 4. Measured net gain for the CW pump-probe experiment. The different curves correspond to a different pump power, while the probe wavelength is varied along the x- axis. The displayed pump power is the on-chip pump power, which was calculated by subtracting a measured 7.5dB coupling loss for the pump wavelength from the measured pump power before coupling to the chip. The pump wavelength was everywhere 1505nm. Optical spectra at the output of the device showing the achieved extinction ratio for a pump power of 2dBm. 12 December 2011 / Vol. 19, No. 26 / OPTICS EXPRESS B821

and gain can be determined. To avoid self-saturating effects by the probe beam, the on-chip input probe power was set as low as 19dBm. By varying the probe wavelength and the pump power, the ER can be extracted as a function of wavelength and power consumption. To derive the on-chip pump power, the grating coupler efficiency was estimated using the transmission measurement through the reference waveguide. The results for a 150 μm long device are shown in Fig. 4. When the pump power is increased, more photons are absorbed and therefore more free carriers are generated. Because of these free carriers the absorption of the probe beam will decrease and eventually a net gain of 2dB is reached. For higher powers however, the net gain does not increase further. The cause for this low gain lies with thermal effects [12], which smoothen the Fermi-Dirac distribution of the generated carriers. Next to directly reducing the gain, this also reduces the absorption of the pump beam. Consequently less carriers are generated for a certain pump power. This effect can be observed when looking at the net gain curves for short wavelengths in Fig. 4. Therefore, improving the thermal design of the device by adding a heat spreader should lead to higher gains. Also moving to a more broadband fiber-tochip coupling scheme so that pumping at shorter wavelengths is made possible could improve the performance. Due to the fact that the probe beam absorption is bleached by the pump beam, a high ER can be achieved (Fig. 4). Comparing the net gain curve without pump with a net gain curve with applied pump yields the ER for the device, assuming that the steady state is reached. This leads to an ER of over 30dB over the entire C-band for a pump power of 4.5dBm. 4.2. Switching speed To be able to serve as an all-optical packet switch, the device needs to switch fast enough between the steady state situations with and without pump. Therefore, the switch on/switch off times of the device were measured by applying a realistic switching signal at a wavelength of 1505nm, which is on during a period of 195ns and off during a switching window of 5ns. By monitoring the resulting modulation of an injected CW probe signal at 1542 nm with an optical oscilloscope, the switching times can be extracted. In Fig. 5 traces of the rising and falling edge of such a switching window are shown. From this the switch on and the switch off time are determined to be respectively 400ps and 1.3ns. Using a switching window of 5ns, this is more than fast enough to ensure that the achieved ER in the CW experiment is also achieved in a dynamic switching experiment. To demonstrate this, in Fig. 5 a trace of a switching window between two switched packets is shown. power (a.u.) 400 ps 90% 1.3 ns 90% power (a.u.) % % C1 0 1 2 3 time (ns) 0 1 2 3 time (ns) 0 2 4 6 8 12 14 16 18 20 time (ns) Fig. 5. Traces of a 1545nm probe signal being switched on and off by a 1505nm pump. From this, a switch on and switch off time of respectively 400ps and 1.3ns can be extracted. Time trace of the switching window between two data packets. 12 December 2011 / Vol. 19, No. 26 / OPTICS EXPRESS B822

5. Packet switching experiment To demonstrate the use of the MIPS as a packet switch, we have used the setup as depicted in Fig. 6. The data signal was sent at a wavelength of 1542.5nm with an average on-chip power of 12dBm. The pump was set at 1505nm and an average on-chip power of 2dBm was used to pump the device. For this pump power, the switch exhibits an ER of over 30dB and has an insertion loss of 4.5 db for the data signal due to incomplete bleaching of the device. Together with the grating coupler loss, this leads to a total insertion loss of 19dB. Two experiments were performed. First, the performance of the switch was characterized under constant pumping and at a data rate of 20Gbit/s to check for any pattern dependence of the device. In this experiment, different length pseudorandom binary sequences (PRBS) were sent through the device and were compared to a back-to-back measurement. From Fig. 7, it is clear that no pattern dependence exists, as the measured bit error rate (BER) curves coincide for both PRBS sequences and that furthermore the switching operation does not lead to a receiver sensitivity penalty. In the second experiment, the pattern generator for the data signal was programmed to give 195/5 ns packets at data rates of both 20 and 40Gbit/s, while the pump beam was programmed to be switched on Clock BER pump lp = 1505 nm polarization ctr. Attenuator fiber bragg grating ls MOD Gb/s label Generator EDFA SOA 40 Gb/s pattern Generator Isolator MIPS Filter lp 90 : signal MOD ls ls = 1542.5 nm EDFA Filter Fig. 6. Setup for the packet switching experiment. 2 7 PRBS 2 B2B 31 PRBS 2 B2B 7 PRBS 2 switch 31 PRBS 2 switch 2 20 Gb/s Packets B2B 20 Gb/s Packets switch 40 Gb/s Packets B2B 40 Gb/s Packets switch Log (BER) 4 6 8 9 Log (BER) 4 6 8 9-13 -12-11 Rx Power (dbm) - -12 - -8-6 -4 Rx Power (dbm) Fig. 7. Measured BER for different PRBS sequences at a bit rate of 20Gbit/s. Measured BER at 20Gbit/s and 40Gbit/s, both back-to-back (B2B) and through the switch. 12 December 2011 / Vol. 19, No. 26 / OPTICS EXPRESS B823

20Gb/s NRZ-OOK Back-to-back 20Gb/s NRZ-OOK Switched 40Gb/s NRZ-OOK Back-to-back 40Gb/s NRZ-OOK Switched Fig. 8. (Left) Eye patterns obtained by a back-to-back measurement. (Right) Eye patterns obtained after switching. Note the increased noise for both the 20Gbit/s and the 40Gbit/s signal in the switching experiment. This noise is associated with the use of an extra EDFA to reach adequate signal power levels in the case of the switching experiment. during the packet and switched off in between two packets. In Fig. 8 the eye patterns obtained in this experiment can be seen and in Fig. 7 the corresponding BER curves are plotted. From the BER curves, it is clear that there is no receiver sensitivity penalty due to the switching operation for the 20Gbit/s signal. However at 40Gbit/s, a penalty of 1.5dB is observed. This penalty is associated with the limited output power at the output grating coupler, which requires the use of an EDFA to amplify the signal. This degrades the optical signal to noise ratio, as can be seen in the eye diagrams for both 20Gbit/s and 40Gbit/s signals, but because of a high ER in the 20Gbit/s signal a receiver sensitivity penalty is only observed at 40Gbit/s. 6. Conclusion We have proposed and characterized a novel all-optical membrane InP switch (MIPS) integrated on SOI, based on an ultra-thin bonded III-V membrane waveguide. Using this device a net gain of up to 2dB has been measured and an ER of over 30dB over the entire C-band was demonstrated for a pump power of 4.5dBm. The device s switch on and switch off times were determined to be 400 ps and 1.3 ns respectively, fast enough to do all-optical packet switching. Finally, we demonstrated penalty free all-optical switching of 20 and 40 Gbit/s packets using a very low on-chip pumping power of 2dBm. In future designs, a 1 m switch will be made, using the proposed broadcast-and-select architecture which uses the MIPS as key switching component. Furthermore, a more broadband and efficient fiber-to-chip coupling scheme using horizontal coupling to a SU8 polymer waveguide on SOI will be used, to avoid the high grating coupling losses and allow for lower pump wavelengths to be used. Using the method proposed in [15], the coupling loss can even be brought down to 0.5dB. Additionally, by narrowing down the MIPS waveguide, the quantum well volume and therefore power consumption can be reduced while having only a minimal impact on the achieved confinement. These measures should allow for the use of a directly modulated laser as a pump signal. 12 December 2011 / Vol. 19, No. 26 / OPTICS EXPRESS B824