4.8 Article

Microcomb-driven silicon photonic systems

Journal

NATURE
Volume 605, Issue 7910, Pages 457-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-04579-3

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This research combines microcomb and SiPh technologies to achieve a low-cost and efficient integrated photonics system, providing new solutions in the fields of optical data transmission and microwave photonics.
Microcombs have sparked a surge of applications over the past decade, ranging from optical communicationsto metrology(1-4). Despite their diverse deployment, most microcomb-based systems rely on a large amount of bulky elements and equipment to fulfil their desired functions, which is complicated, expensive and power consuming. By contrast, foundry-based silicon photonics (SiPh) has had remarkable success in providing versatile functionality in a scalable and low-cost manner(5-7), but its available chip-based light sources lackthe capacity for parallelization, which limits the scope of SiPh applications. Here we combine these two technologies by using a power-efficient and operationally simple aluminium-gallium-arsenide-on-insulator microcomb source to drive complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor SiPh engines. We present two important chip-scale photonic systems for optical data transmission and microwave photonics, respectively. A microcomb-based integrated photonic data link is demonstrated, based on a pulse-amplitude four-level modulation scheme with a two-terabit-per-second aggregate rate, and a highly reconfigurable microwave photonic filter with a high level of integration is constructed using a time-stretch approach. Such synergy of a microcomb and SiPh integrated components is an essential step towardsthe next generation of fully integrated photonic systems.

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