Title: Nonlinear Optics in Silicon Applications in Optical Communication Systems
1Nonlinear Optics in Silicon - Applications in
Optical Communication Systems
- APS-2006-W6.00004
- 418Â PM 454Â PM
- Thomas E. Murphy
- Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
2Collaborators and Colleagues
- Research Assistants
- Reza Salem (UMD)
- Paveen Apiratikul (UMD)
- Undergraduate Students
- Amir Ali Ahmadi (UMD/MIT)
- Postdoctoral Researchers
- Gaston E. Tudury (UMBC)
- Anthony S. Lenihan (UMBC)
- Faculty
- Gary M. Carter (UMBC)
- Government
- Timothy U. Horton (LPS)
3Outline
- Introduction Optical Signal Processing
- Nonlinear Effects in Silicon
- Two-Photon Absorption
- Polarization Dependence
- Applications in Communication Systems
- Future Directions
4Comparison of WDM and OTDM
5Optical Signal Processing
- (Controlling light with light)
6Why Optical Signal Processing?
- Speed
- Optical nonlinear processes can respond on a
timescale faster than the fastest electronics - Short optical pulses are easier to create than
short electrical pulses - Cost / Simplicity
- Avoid costly O-E-O conversion(Optical
Electrical Optical) - Only convert O-E or E-O at the edges of the
network
7Some Practical Constraints
WHAT WILL IT TAKE TO REPLACE ELECTRONICS WITH
OPTICS?
- Wavelength independence
- Must work over entire C-band (1530-1580 nm)
- Polarization independence
- Cannot depend upon the input polarization state
- Attainable optical power levels
- Conventional EDFAs Pavg lt 200 mW
- Speed
- Faster than electronics (gt 40 Gb/s)
8Nonlinear Optical Effects in Silicon
- c(2) 0 (symmetry)
- Real c(3)
- Self/cross- phase modulation
- Intensity-dependent refraction (n2)
- Four-wave mixing
- Self-focusing
- Imag c(3)
- Two-photon absorption
- Raman Effect (also c(3))
- Free-carrier plasma dispersion
NON RESONANT ELECTRONIC
(W6.00002)
(W6.00003)
9Linear vs. Nonlinear Absorption
Two-Photon Absorption
Linear Absorption
Quadratic nonlinearity Similar to
second-harmonic generation
10Two-Photon Absorption in Silicon Photodiode
TPA is observed when 1100 nm lt ? lt 2200 nm
11How Fast is Two-Photon Absorption?
Autocorrelation of 20 fs optical pulse using
two-photon absorption in silicon detector
- Non-resonant effect
- Phase matching is not required
- Very broad bandwidth (1100-2200 nm)
D. J. Ripin et al., Opt. Lett. 27(1) 6163, 2002.
12How Sensitive is Two-Photon Absorption?
Fringe-resolved autocorrelation of 1.7 ps pulse
measured in silicon APD detector
Pavg 7.2 µW Ppeak 220 µW
C. Xu et al., Electron. Lett. 38(2) 8688, 2002.
13Is TPA Polarization Independent?
LINEAR POLARIZATIONS
ELLIPTICAL POLARIZATIONS
- No dependence for linear polarization
- Decreases by 2/3 for circular pol.
R. Salem and T. E. Murphy, Opt. Lett. 29(13),
1524-1526 (2004).
14Polarization Dependence
15Average Power Linear vs. Circular
- These two signals have same intensity
16Two-Photon Absorption Linear vs. Circular
- Nonlinear current from two-photon absorption is
proportional to ltE (t)4gt, not ltE (t)2gt
17Polarization-Dependence in Cross-Correlation
- In most cases, we have two different inputs
- Cross-correlation depends on both polarization
states - Observation In almost all cases, one
polarization state is fixed (locally generated)
18Polarization Sensitivity Experiment
R. Salem et al., Opt. Lett. 29(13) 15241526,
2004.
19Polarization Sensitivity
- If one polarization state is fixed CIRCULAR, the
cross-correlation is independent of the other
state
20Applications of Two-Photon Absorption
- Autocorrelation
- Pattern / Address Recognition
- Synchronization and Clock Recovery
- Temporal Demultiplexing
- Optical Sampling
- Quality Monitoring
21Electrical Clock Recovery
- Advantages polarization and wavelength
independent - Disadvantages limited speed (lt40 Gb/s), not
scalable
22Optical Clock Recovery
- Does not require high-speed electrical detector
or mixer - Nonlinear medium acts as phase detector
- Nonlinear Medium Two-photon absorption
23Clock Recovery using Two Photon Absorption
Salem et al., IEEE Photon.Technol.Lett. 17(9),
1968-1970 (2005) S. Takasaka et al, ECOC, Th
1.3.6 (2005)
2480 Gb/s Transmitter and Receiver
2580 Gb/s Clock Recovery System
- PCLK 6 mW, PDATA 3 mW
- Closed-Loop Bandwidth 6 kHz
26Frequency Response of Phase-Locked Loop
27Timing Jitter Spectral Domain
28Timing Jitter of Recovered Clock
- Enables measurement of low-frequency jitter
(drift) below 100 Hz - Limited by electronic jitter of instrument
29Jitter Measurement
30Effect of Polarization Fluctuations
tmin lt t0 lt ?max
Zero-crossing time
31Agreement with Experimental Results
- Statistical distribution of the zero-crossing
time, measured on sampling oscilloscope
Polarization Scrambling OFF
50 ps
Polarization Scrambling ON
- srms sqrt(343)2 (290)2 190 fs
32Wavelength-Independent Operation
Eye Diagrams of Recovered Data
l 1530 nm
l 1550 nm
l 1570 nm
- Wavelength limited only by EDFA
3380 Gb/s Transmission over 1000 km
- No control of polarization is needed
3480 Gb/s Transmission over 1000 km
35Challenges
- Off-the-shelf devices are not optimized for
two-photon absorption (AR coatings, depletion
region thickness, etc.) - Interaction length is constrained by diffraction
- Compact devices are desired
- Efficiency need devices that require less
optical power
36The Future Waveguide Detection
WAVEGUIDE PHOTODIODE
BULK PHOTODIODE
- Overcome focusing limit
- Increase interaction length
37Resonant Cavity Detection
- Most applications do not require fs resolution
- Resonant Cavity trades speed for sensitivity
38Summary
- Nonlinear detection in Silicon (TPA) is
- Ultrafast
- Sensitive
- Inexpensive
- Broadband
- Polarization Insensitive (if youre careful!)
- Potential Applications in High-Speed Networks
- Clock recovery (described here)
- Pattern / Address Recognition
- Demultiplexing / Sampling
39Related Work
- R. Salem and T. E. Murphy, "Polarization-Insensiti
ve Cross-Correlation Using Two-Photon Absorption
in a Silicon Photodiode", Opt. Lett. 29(13),
1524-1526 (2004). - R. Salem, G. E. Tudury, T. U. Horton, G. M.
Carter and T. E. Murphy, "Polarization-Insensitive
Optical Clock Recovery at 80 Gb/s using a
Silicon Photodiode", IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett.
17(9), 1968-1970, (2005). - G. E. Tudury, R. Salem, G. M. Carter and T. E.
Murphy, "Transmission of 80 Gbit/s over 840 km in
standard fibre without polarisation control",
Electron. Lett. 41(25) 1394-1395 (2005). - R. Salem, A. A. Ahmadi, G. E. Tudury and T. E.
Murphy, "Two-Photon Absorption for Optical Clock
Recovery in OTDM Networks", submitted to J.
Lightwave Techonol. 2005.
For more information, please visit us
online http//www.photonics.umd.edu/
40Dithering Phase Detection
CROSSCORRELATION
41Electrical Dithering vs. Optical Dithering