TY - JOUR
T1 - A highly efficient thermo-optic microring modulator assisted by graphene
AU - Gan, Sheng
AU - Cheng, Chuantong
AU - Zhan, Yaohui
AU - Huang, Beiju
AU - Gan, Xuetao
AU - Li, Shaojuan
AU - Lin, Shenghuang
AU - Li, Xiaofeng
AU - Zhao, Jianlin
AU - Chen, Hongda
AU - Bao, Qiaoliang
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 The Royal Society of Chemistry.
PY - 2015/12/21
Y1 - 2015/12/21
N2 - Graphene's remarkable electrical and optical properties afford great potential for constructing various optoelectronic devices, including modulators, photodetectors and pulse lasers. In particular, graphene-based optical modulators were demonstrated to be featured with a broadband response, small footprint, ultrafast speed and CMOS-compatibility, which may provide an alternative architecture for light-modulation in integrated photonic circuits. While on-chip graphene modulators have been studied in various structures, most of them are based on a capacitance-like configuration subjected to complicated fabrication processes and providing a low yield of working devices. Here, we experimentally demonstrate a new type of graphene modulator by employing graphene's electrical and thermal properties, which can be achieved with a simple fabrication flow. On a graphene-coated microring resonator with a small active area of 10 μm2, we have obtained an effective optical modulation via thermal energy electrically generated in a graphene layer. The resonant wavelength of the ring resonator shifts by 2.9 nm under an electrical power of 28 mW, which enables a large modulation depth of 7 dB and a broad operating wavelength range of 6.2 nm with 3 dB modulation. Due to the extremely high electrical and thermal conductivity in graphene, the graphene thermo-optical modulator operates at a very fast switching rate compared with the conventional silicon thermo-optic modulator, i.e. 10%-90% rise (90%-10% fall) time of 750 ns (800 ns). The results promise a novel architecture for massive on-chip modulation of optical interconnects compatible with CMOS technology.
AB - Graphene's remarkable electrical and optical properties afford great potential for constructing various optoelectronic devices, including modulators, photodetectors and pulse lasers. In particular, graphene-based optical modulators were demonstrated to be featured with a broadband response, small footprint, ultrafast speed and CMOS-compatibility, which may provide an alternative architecture for light-modulation in integrated photonic circuits. While on-chip graphene modulators have been studied in various structures, most of them are based on a capacitance-like configuration subjected to complicated fabrication processes and providing a low yield of working devices. Here, we experimentally demonstrate a new type of graphene modulator by employing graphene's electrical and thermal properties, which can be achieved with a simple fabrication flow. On a graphene-coated microring resonator with a small active area of 10 μm2, we have obtained an effective optical modulation via thermal energy electrically generated in a graphene layer. The resonant wavelength of the ring resonator shifts by 2.9 nm under an electrical power of 28 mW, which enables a large modulation depth of 7 dB and a broad operating wavelength range of 6.2 nm with 3 dB modulation. Due to the extremely high electrical and thermal conductivity in graphene, the graphene thermo-optical modulator operates at a very fast switching rate compared with the conventional silicon thermo-optic modulator, i.e. 10%-90% rise (90%-10% fall) time of 750 ns (800 ns). The results promise a novel architecture for massive on-chip modulation of optical interconnects compatible with CMOS technology.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84948650984&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1039/c5nr05084g
DO - 10.1039/c5nr05084g
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:84948650984
SN - 2040-3364
VL - 7
SP - 20249
EP - 20255
JO - Nanoscale
JF - Nanoscale
IS - 47
ER -