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Review and perspective on ultrafast wavelength‐size electro‐optic modulators
Author(s) -
Liu Ke,
Ye Chen Ran,
Khan Sikandar,
Sorger Volker J.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
laser and photonics reviews
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.778
H-Index - 116
eISSN - 1863-8899
pISSN - 1863-8880
DOI - 10.1002/lpor.201400219
Subject(s) - photonics , nanophotonics , bandwidth (computing) , computer science , physics , optoelectronics , diffraction , electronic circuit , photonic integrated circuit , optics , telecommunications , quantum mechanics
Abstract As electronic device feature sizes scale‐down, the power consumed due to onchip communications as compared to computations will increase dramatically; likewise, the available bandwidth per computational operation will continue to decrease. Integrated photonics can offer savings in power and potential increase in bandwidth for onchip networks. Classical diffraction‐limited photonics currently utilized in photonic integrated circuits (PIC) is characterized by bulky and inefficient devices compared to their electronic counterparts due to weak light–matter interactions (LMI). Performance critical for the PIC is electro‐optic modulators (EOM), whose performances depend inherently on enhancing LMIs. Current EOMs based on diffraction‐limited optical modes often deploy ring resonators and are consequently bulky, photon‐lifetime modulation limited, and power inefficient due to large electrical capacitances and thermal tuning requirements. In contrast, wavelength‐scale EOMs are potentially able to surpass fundamental restrictions set by classical (i.e. diffraction‐limited) devices via (a) high‐index modulating materials, (b) nonresonant field and density‐of‐states enhancements such as found in metal optics, and (c) synergistic onchip integration schemes. This manuscript discusses challenges, opportunities, and early demonstrations of nanophotonic EOMs attempting to address this LMI challenge, and early benchmarks suggest that nanophotonic building blocks allow for densely integrated high‐performance photonic integrated circuits.