Multitude applications of photonic devices and technologies for the generation and manipulation of arbitrary and random microwave waveforms, at unprecedented processing speeds, have been proposed in the literature over the past three decades. This class of photonic applications for microwave engineering is known as microwave photonics (MWP). The vast capabilities of MWP have allowed the realization of key functionalities which are either highly complex or simply not possible in the microwave domain alone. Recently, this growing field has adopted the integrated photonics technologies to develop microwave photonic systems with enhanced robustness as well as with a significant reduction of size, cost, weight, and power consumption. In particular, silicon photonics technology is of great interest for this aim as it offers outstanding possibilities for integration of highly-complex active and passive photonic devices, permitting monolithic integration of MWP with high-speed silicon electronics. In this article, we present a review of recent work on MWP functions developed on the silicon platform. We particularly focus on newly reported designs for signal modulation, arbitrary waveform generation, filtering, true-time delay, phase shifting, beam steering, and frequency measurement.
We develop a dispersive phase filter design framework suitable for compact integration using waveguide Bragg gratings (WBGs) in silicon. Our proposal is to utilize an equivalent “discrete” spectral phase filtering process, in which the original continuous quadratic spectral phase function of a group velocity dispersion (GVD) line is discretized and bounded in a modulo
2
π
basis. Through this strategy, we avoid the phase accumulation of the GVD line, leading to a significant reduction in device footprint (length) as compared to conventional GVD devices (e.g., using a linearly chirped WBG). The proposed design is validated through numerical simulations and proof-of-concept experiments. Specifically, using the proposed methodology, we demonstrate
2
×
pulse repetition-rate multiplication of a 10 GHz picosecond pulse train by dispersion-induced Talbot effect on a silicon chip.
On-chip optical group-velocity dispersion (GVD) is highly desired for a wide range of signal processing applications, including low-latency and low-power-consumption dispersion compensation of telecommunication data signals. However, present technologies, such as linearly chirped waveguide Bragg gratings (LCWBGs), employ spectral phase accumulation along the frequency spectrum. To achieve the needed specifications in most applications, this strategy requires device lengths that are not compatible with on-chip integration while incurring in relatively long processing latencies. Here, we demonstrate a novel design strategy that utilizes a discretized and bounded spectral phase filtering process to emulate the continuous spectral phase variation of a target GVD line. This leads to a significant reduction of the resulting device length, enabling on-chip integration and ultra-low latencies. In experiments, we show GVD compensation of both NRZ and PAM4 data signals with baud rates up to 24 GBd over a 31.12-km fibre-optic link using a 4.1-mm WBG-based on-chip phase filter in a silicon-on-insulator (SOI) platform, at least 5× shorter compared to an equivalent LCWBG, reducing the processing latency down to ∼ 100 ps. The bandwidth of the mm-long device can be further extended to the THz range by employing a simple and highly efficient phase-only sampling of the grating profile. The proposed solution provides a promising route toward a true on-chip realization of a host of GVD-based all-optical analog signal processing functionalities.
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