4.5 Article

Monolithically Integrated 8 x 8 Transmitter-Router Based on Tunable V-Cavity Laser Array and Cyclic Arrayed Waveguide Grating Router

Journal

IEEE PHOTONICS JOURNAL
Volume 14, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JPHOT.2022.3191946

Keywords

Arrayed waveguide gratings; Optical waveguides; Optical transmitters; Optical device fabrication; Waveguide lasers; Integrated optics; Optical fiber networks; Arrayed waveguide grating; photonic integrated circuit; tunable lasers; wavelength router

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61960206001]

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A monolithic 8 x 8 transmitter-router chip, fabricated on InGaAlAs-InP multi-quantum well wafer, has been experimentally demonstrated for distributed wavelength routing network in the O-band. The chip integrates a tunable V-cavity laser array, a cyclic-arrayed waveguide grating router, and a semiconductor amplifier array using the quantum-well intermixing technique. It offers multi-wavelength and multi-port transmissions, making it suitable for applications in datacenters and high-performance computers.
A monolithic 8 x 8 transmitter-router chip fabricated on InGaAlAs-InP multi-quantum well wafer for distributed wavelength routing network in the O-band with a channel spacing of 400 GHz is experimentally demonstrated. A tunable V-cavity laser (VCL) array, a cyclic-arrayed waveguide grating router (AWGR) and a semiconductor amplifier (SOA) array are integrated using the quantum-well intermixing (QWI) technique for its fabrication simplicity and cost effectiveness. A 200 GHz-spaced compact-size VCL is demonstrated with a 27 nm tuning range and a side-mode suppression ratio (SMSR) around 40 dB using a single-electrode controlled tuning. The chip output power is 24.6 mW. Measurement results of the transmitter-router chip show that all 64 input-output combinations have cyclic response spectra. After passing through the SOA with 80 mA bias current, an output power of about 9.6 mW and optical signal-to-noise ratio (OSNR) up to 39 dB have been measured. The demonstrated transmitter-router chip is fabricated on the same quantum well structure without requiring multiple epitaxial growth and complex grating fabrication. The characteristics of multi-wavelength and multi-port transmissions enable the distributed optical routing networks with flexible bandwidth allocation, which can find wide application in datacenters and high-performance computers.

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