4.7 Article

Testing Optomechanical Microwave Oscillators for SATCOM Application

Journal

JOURNAL OF LIGHTWAVE TECHNOLOGY
Volume 40, Issue 14, Pages 4539-4547

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JLT.2022.3165974

Keywords

Photonics; Oscillators; Silicon; Optical amplifiers; Masers; Microwave photonics; Microwave oscillators; Optomechanical cavity; phonon lasing; micro wave oscillator; SATCOM application; silicon photonics

Funding

  1. H2020 Future and Emerging Technologies program [PHENOMEN 713450, SIOMO 945915, OPTIMA 730149]
  2. Spanish State Research Agency [PGC2018-094490-BC21, ICTS-2017-28-UPV-9]
  3. Generalitat Valenciana [BEST/2020/178, PROMETEO/2019/123, IDIFEDER/2020/041, IDIFEDER/2021/061]

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The realization of photonic microwave oscillators using optomechanical cavities has become a reality. By pumping the cavity with a blue-detuned laser, the input signal gets modulated by highly-coherent tones at integer multiples of the mechanical resonance. Implementing optomechanical cavities on released films with high index of refraction can lead to highly-stable signals in the microwave domain upon photodetection. OMOs are very promising candidates to build ultra-low weight photonics-based microwave oscillators for SATCOM applications.
The realization of photonic microwave oscillators using optomechanical cavities has recently become a reality. By pumping the cavity with a blue-detuned laser, the so-called phonon lasing regime - in which a mechanical resonance is amplified beyond losses - can be reached and the input signal gets modulated by highly-coherent tones at integer multiples of the mechanical resonance. Implementing optomechanical cavities on released films with high index of refraction can lead to optical modes at telecom wavelengths and mechanical resonances in the GHz scale, resulting in highly-stable signals in the microwave domain upon photodetection. Owing to the extreme compactness of such cavities, application in satellite communications (SATCOM) seems highly appropriate, but no experiments have been reported so far. In this paper, an optomechanical microwave oscillator (OMO) built on a micron-scale silicon optomechanical crystal cavity is characterized and tested in a real SATCOM testbed. Using a blue-detuned laser, the OMO is driven into a phonon lasing state where multiple harmonics are generated, reaching tones up to 20 GHz. Under this regime, its practical applicability, remarkably addressing its performance as a photonic local oscillator, has been validated. The results, in addition with the advantages of extreme compactness and silicon-technology compatibility, make OMOs very promising candidates to build ultra-low weight photonics-based microwave oscillators for SATCOM applications.

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