
Driver circuit for a PAM‐4 optical transmitter using 65 nm CMOS and silicon photonic technologies
Author(s) -
Zhou S.,
Wu H.,
Sadeghipour K.,
Scarcella C.,
Eason C.,
Rensing M.,
Power M.,
Antony C.,
O'Brien P.,
Townsend P.,
Ossieur P.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
electronics letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.375
H-Index - 146
eISSN - 1350-911X
pISSN - 0013-5194
DOI - 10.1049/el.2016.2418
Subject(s) - extinction ratio , silicon photonics , cmos , photonics , amplifier , chip , switched capacitor , retiming , materials science , optoelectronics , electrical engineering , electronic engineering , capacitor , voltage , engineering , wavelength
A push–pull silicon photonic Mach–Zehnder modulator (MZM) driver is presented which uses a switched capacitor approach to generate a ∼2 V peak‐to‐peak differential 4‐level pulse amplitude modulation (PAM‐4) signal. The driver chip includes a Gray encoder and retiming flip‐flops. The switched capacitor approach allows driving the lumped silicon photonic MZM with reduced power consumption compared with the conventional approach of driving MZMs (with transmission line based electrodes) with a power amplifier. This is critical for upcoming short‐reach link standards such as 400 Gbit/s 802.3 Ethernet. The chip was fabricated using a 65 nm CMOS technology and flip‐chipped on top of the silicon photonic chip (fabricated using IMEC's ISIPP25G technology) that contains the MZM. Open eyes with 4 dB extinction ratio for a 36 Gbit/s (18 Gbaud) PAM‐4 signal are experimentally demonstrated. The electronic driver chip has a core area of 0.11 mm 2 and consumes 236 mW from 1.2 to 2.4 V supply voltages. This corresponds to an energy efficiency of 6.55 pJ/bit including Gray encoder and retiming, or 5.37 pJ/bit for the driver circuit only.