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Publication
CLEO/Europe-EQEC 2019
Conference paper
Silicon-integrated high-speed modulators based on barium titanate with record-large pockels coefficients
Abstract
Integrated photonics is a key technology platform for optical communication, sensing, and data processing. Driven by the success of the CMOS industry and the resulting maturity of silicon-based fabrication methods, silicon photonics has evolved as an important candidate to realize integrated photonic circuits (PICs) in a cost-efficient and scalable way. Electrical control of the optical properties is critical in PICs: Fast electro-optical modulators are essential to reach high data rates, low-loss switches are needed to dynamically reconfigure networks, and low-power tuning elements are important to compensate temperature fluctuations. Traditionally, such components are implemented in silicon photonics by exploiting the plasma-dispersion effect [1] or Joule heating [2], which are, however, intrinsically linked with optical absorption or high power consumption. These challenges could be solved by using the Pockels effect as an electro-optic switching mechanism. However, because silicon lacks a Pockels effect, other materials with a non-vanishing Pockels effect need to be integrated on the technology platform.