The prospect for generating supercontinuum pulses on a silicon chip is studied. Using ~4ps optical pulses with 2.2GW/cm(2) peak power, a 2 fold spectral broadening is obtained. Theoretical calculations, that include the effect of two-photon-absorption, indicate up to 5 times spectral broadening is achievable at 10x higher peak powers. Representing a nonlinear loss mechanism at high intensities, TPA limits the maximum optical bandwidth that can be generated.
A modified separation by implantation of oxygen process has been developed to sculpt vertically coupled microdisk resonators in silicon. The approach involves the implantation of oxygen ions into a silicon substrate, patterned with thermal oxide, to define waveguides on the bottom silicon layer, and photolithography and reactive ion etching to define the microdisk resonators on the top silicon layer. The top and the bottom silicon layers are separated by the oxide layer that was formed after the oxygen implantation. Fabricated microdisk resonators show resonances with a Q value of 10 300 and a free spectral range of 5.4nm.
Add-drop filters, based on vertically coupled microdisk resonators, have been realized in silicon, using a modified separation by implantation of oxygen process. Buried rib waveguides in the bottom-layer silicon, of a two-layer structure, are coupled to microdisk resonators in the top-layer silicon through a silicon dioxide layer formed by oxygen implantation. The radii of the microdisk structures were varied suitably to obtain resonators with slightly shifted resonance wavelengths. The average adjacent channel crosstalk suppression of these filters exhibits an upper limit of 12.11dB and a lower limit of 6.2dB over the wavelength band under consideration.
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