EXTRINSIC GAIN LASER AND OPTICAL AMPLIFICATION DEVICE
An optical amplifier on a silicon platform includes a first doped device layer and a second doped device layer. A gain medium is positioned between the first and second doped device layers. The gain medium comprises extrinsic gain materials so as to substantially confine in the gain medium a light signal and allow the optical amplifier to be electrically or optically pumped.
This application claims priority from provisional application Ser. No. 60/801,444 filed May 18, 2006, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONThe invention relates to the field of Si lasers, and in particular to a laser structure obtaining efficient light emission at around 1550 nm from the direct band gap of Ge.
An efficient laser source on Si is the most crucial device to achieve optoelectronic integrated circuit (OEIC) on Si. Although research on this field has been continued for over two decades, no efficient electrically pumped laser has been demonstrated on Si yet. Therefore, it is of great significance to achieve an efficient, electrically pumped light source on Si platform. Further more, it would be ideal if the light source emits at a wavelength around 1550 mn so that the on-chip optical signals are compatible with silicon wavguides, germanium detectors and the broadband gain spectrum of Er-doped dielectrics and, additionally, can be easily interfaced with the existing optical fiber communications infrastructure.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONAccording to one aspect of the invention, there is provided an optical amplifier on a silicon platform. The optical amplifier includes a first doped device layer and a second doped device layer. A gain medium is positioned between the first and second doped device layers. The gain medium comprises extrinsic gain materials so as to substantially confine in the gain medium a light signal and allow the optical amplifier to be electrically or optically pumped.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of performing optical amplification of a light signal on a silicon platform. The method includes positioning a first doped device layer and positioning a second doped device layer. Also, the method includes exposing the light signal to a gain medium positioned between the first and second doped device layers. The gain medium comprises extrinsic gain materials so as to substantially confine in the gain medium a light signal and allow the optical amplifier to be electrically or optically pumped.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of forming an optical amplifier on a silicon platform. The method includes forming a first doped device layer and forming a second doped device layer. Also, the method includes forming a gain medium positioned between the first and second doped device layers. The gain medium comprises extrinsic gain materials so as to substantially confine in the gain medium a light signal and allow the optical amplifier to be electrically or optically pumped.
The invention provides a design for a laser or optical amplification device. The device utilizes a slot waveguide configuration which allows substantial confinement of the optical field within a low-index gain medium when suitable polarization is propagating in the waveguide. The same slot waveguide design allows electrical current to be transported through an insulating gain medium, because its thickness supports a tunneling conduction mechanism. This property allows electronic pumping of the structure which is favorable to integration of the device with electronic circuits. Optical pumping remains an option with the design, as well. The most attractive gain medium is Er-doped dielectric glass that delivers a broad gain spectrum centered around the telecommunications standard wavelength of 1550 nm. The target application for this device is on chip amplification of WDM signals and for a multi-wavelength source for an optical power supply to supply the WDM channel wavelengths.
The inventive device can be pumped by either optical or electrical energy, but it is particularly significant that electrical current injection can be used. The gain medium is a material with a low effective refractive index comprised of a single composition, layers of materials of differing composition or structured mixtures of materials with, in each case, at least one of them being doped with a density of optically active species such as Er ions or semiconductor quantum confined entities.
The gain medium may also be a materials system comprising of an optically active host. For lasing to occur, a majority population of ground states in the medium is converted to excited states by a pump flux of photons or electrons. The device performance is measured as the ratio of the signal gain to the required pump power referenced to a common noise factor. Best performance is achieved if the optical mode of the signal to be amplified is confined to the excited state volume of the gain medium, and if the quantum efficiency of the pumping excitation process is near unity.
The gain medium region 10 includes a portion of a p+-type layer 20 and a first vertical slot 21 comprising SiO2. A gain material layer 22 is positioned between the first vertical slot 21 and a second vertical slot 24. An n+-type layer is placed between the n-type device layer 12 and the second vertical slot 24.
The gain medium region 40 includes a portion of doped layers 34 and 42 and the horizontal slot 50, 52 and 54. A gain material layer 52 is positioned between the first tunnel layer 50 and a second tunnel layer 54. The p-type device layer 34 is placed between the buried oxide layer 38 and the tunnel layer 54. In this embodiment, the gain material layer 52 includes Er-doped materials such Er-doped SiO2. Other types of gain materials such as index guided structures with Er-doped silicon nitride or quantum dot doped oxides can be used.
Ultra-low loss waveguide structures that produce cavity factors Q>105, are desired. The gain medium is designed according to its electrical pump energy transfer, optical/materials interaction strength, optical materials losses, and density of light emitters. An electroluminescent material with light emission in the 1200-1700 nm wavelength range is desired.
The primary extrinsic dopant candidates are the Er3+ ion and PbS/PbSe quantum dots. Erbium represents a conservative approach that leverages an extensive library of glass materials knowledge from the fiber optic telecommunications industry, and can further exploit the novel energy transfer properties of Si-nanocrystals (Si-nc) and Si-nanowires. The study of Si-nanocrystals and Si-nanowires has matured over the last five years into a critical mass of materials engineering knowledge. Nanostructured silicon oxide (SiO2), phosphate (P2O5), and silicon nitride (Si3N4) glass dielectrics can promote the extrinsic dopant inversion through energy transfer processes. PbS/PbSe quantum dots are a high optical gain approach based on recent breakthroughs with considerable potential for integration into host materials compatible with a CMOS process flow.
A remarkable feature of the Si 60/SiO2 62/Si 64 slot waveguide structure depicted in
Several slot laser cavity configurations, including the vertically-oriented slot 2, as illustrated by
The horizontal slot allows for planar CMOS processing but requires fabrication of a Si/SiO2/Si/SiO2/Si-substrate structure. The horizontal design provides high precision definition of the optically active slot layer without an etching process, ensuring low propagation loss. The major horizontal slot structure process design constraint is fabrication of an upper doped cladding layer/electrode of low propagation loss. An alternative process flow can employ wafer bonding and layer transfer to form the heterostructure. It is reasonable to expect fabrication of Si/SiO2/Si/SiO2/Si-substrate structures by bonding and transferring 140 nm Si layers onto commercially-obtained SOI structures. Alternative methods can include the use of low-loss, <2 dB/cm, amorphous, polysilicon or similarly silicon-compatible, doped upper layers.
The high confinement factor of slot layers is a result of the high index contrast between the low index slot material and the adjacent high index guide layers. Multi-slot layer structures can be designed to further increase signal confinement in the low index gain medium.
Results show high electrical injection efficiency into Si-rich Si3N4:Er, making this materials systems an ideal candidate for exploring the slot multilayer structure. Vertical and alternative lateral injection schemes can be used in Si-rich SiO2/Si-rich Si3N4:Er multilayers slots in order to enhance Er population inversion. Er ions can be electrically sensitized by Si nanoclusters embedded within the Si-rich Si3N4 layer, Si-rich SiO2 layer, or potential combination of both, thus enhancing pump efficiency. By changing the number of layers and by selective Er incorporation, optimization of critical parameters such as Er-Er interaction length, up conversion, and energy transfer efficiency can be optimized.
The efficient electrical excitation of Si-rich Si3N4:Er also opens the pathway to return to conventional index-guided confinement schemes with confinement factors close to 0.6 and minimal high-dielectric/low-dielectric interfaces to hinder potential scattering. The key to successful electrical injection into an index-guided waveguide is through the application of a transparent, at the laser wavelength, and conducting cladding. Such high transparency properties in sputtered Indium Tin Oxide have successfully been demonstrated.
The low IR emission cross section of σ˜6×10−21 cm2 for Er in Si-rich oxides and Si-rich nitrides requires the design of high Quality Factor Q resonant cavities with Q>105. The evanescent coupling physics of ring resonators make such devices ideal cavities for such high Q applications. One can determine lasing criteria for the Er-doped oxide and nitride environments by standard methods; results are summarized in
Both the already demonstrated vertical, and proposed horizontal, slot waveguides are readily made into resonator structures using either ring configurations or waveguides with embedded high-index-contrast slots or holes for Bragg reflection. The selection of these is determined by which provides best electrical access and lowest optical losses.
Si-nc sensitized Er in SiO2 (SiO2:Si-nc,Er), phosphorus-enriched SiO2(P-SiO2:Si-nc,Er), and Si3N4, can be used as gain media for the optically- or electrically-pumped Si slot laser, as discussed in
Recent measurements indicate the internal radiative quantum efficiency for excitons in Si-nc is high (60-100%). Si-nanocrystal-sensitized Er (Si-nc:Er) in SiO2 has been extensively investigated and the following features are now well established, for example excitation of Si-nc and energy transfer between Si-nc and Er are faster than radiative emission rates for Er, enabling nc-Si:Er gain media to be inverted. Er can be incorporated at high concentration (7.5×1020 cm−3)7 in P-doped Sio2. Thus, Si-nc:Er can deliver a gain/length as high as 20 dB/cm, despite a small emission cross section of σ˜6×10−21cm2. Rayleigh scattering calculations show scattering loss by the nm-scale nanocrystals to be negligible. Assuming a confinement factor of 0.26 in a 25 nm SiO2 layer, one can obtain modal gain of 2.70 dB/cm.
An electrical excitation cross section of σe=1014 cm2 has been observed by electroluminescence measurement of Si-rich SiO2:Er. The minimum Q factor to obtain lasing under electrical injection in a resonant cavity using Si-nanocrystals in oxide or nitride materials, assuming similar values for σe, as shown in
Nanoscale control of the Er to Si-nanostructure distance can influence Forster energy transfer from Si-nanostructure to Er. Deviation from typical dipole-dipole 1/r6 interaction strength, due to thin sheet (2D) and wire configurations shown in
Growing atomic-scale precision silicon sheets with controlled crystallinity, produce brick-like 10 nm-thick Si nanostructures with large aspect ratios that facilitate in-plane carrier transport and enhance suppression of energy backtransfer from the Er atom, due to quantum confinement out of the sheet-plane. Such nanostructures will facilitate in-plane electrical injection that relies on band conduction across the sheet and not tunneling through a dielectric. Bypassing Fowler-Nordheim tunneling is predicted to significantly enhance energy transfer to the Er atom.
Electrical injection can be achieved through surface contact with Si nanowires that embed within an SiO2:Er or P—SiO2:Er host matrix and transfer energy to Er. Long single crystal wires can be grown at low defect density and constant diameter with in situ doping during or post-growth to form p-n junctions. The synthesized nanostructures are surface-passivated by thermal oxidation, optimizing energy transfer to Er from bipolar band injection. High quality Si-nanowires with long 10-100 μs photoluminescence lifetimes can be grown by CVD and catalyzed by TiSi2 particles.
Thin coatings of SiO2:Er can be deposited onto the nanowires by spin coating, solution processing, and sputtering. By controlling a spacer layer by means of thermal oxidation, the structure can be optimally tuned between Si nanowire and Er atom density.
The optimization includes growth of nanowires using a number of CMOS-compatible catalyst particles directly out of a Si chip. The effects of surface passivation, oxidation, and annealing on the PL, should be optimized in the context of electronic transport, Forster energy transfer to Er, and obtaining efficient charge injection and electroluminescence from nanowires.
In order to ensure net gain and efficient lasing, a tight budget of permissible propagation losses within the proposed resonant cavity structures is required. Loss mechanisms common to slot and index guided confinement are scattering loss, radiative turning loss, and free carrier absorption or other host material absorption losses. A waveguide scattering loss of 0.4 dB/cm is assumed for these waveguide designs which can be achieved, for example, using state-of-the-art local-oxidation definition processes. Radiative losses are assumed <0.1 dB/cm for ring resonators with diameters >100 μm. Under electrical injection, it is imperative to ascertain the amount of steady state free carrier absorption, due to the forward/reverse biased injection of a tunnel or band current.
While free carrier loss in the slot confinement-based MOS structure can be minimized by use of lowly doped Si in the 1016cm−3 dopant range, excess carriers will be present within an accumulation layer or inversion layer, used to drive tunnel injection. A sheet carrier density will form to support tunnel injection at a flux rate that matches the exciton recombination rate/area requisite to invert Er ions: 2×1014 cm−2s−1. This injection rate corresponds to a current density of 32 mA/cm2. Field effect injection exhibits Fowler-Nordheim tunneling behavior; for a 3 nm tunnel oxide thickness, a sheet carrier density (<0.2V bias accumulation layer) of 8×1011cm−2 is achieved.
It is conservatively assumed all of this sheet charge contributes to free carrier absorption, giving a free carrier absorption loss of 1.1 dB/cm. If one allows for a linear output coupling waveguide and assumes only 80% of the ring is Er-doped and electrically active, the average losses around ring are computed to be (αav=1.21 dB/cm.
Starting from a 13 dB/cm achievable gain, a 3 nm tunnel oxide's confinement implies a modal gain of gav=2.70 dB/cm; thus a net gain of 1.49 dB/cm can be achieved, which will enable lasing. It also suggests an upper limit on the differential quantum efficiency of ˜53%, reduced of course by the internal efficiency of the injection process.
Free carrier absorption due to accumulation and inversion layers is the primary optical gain engineering parameter to design for when using slot confinement.
Efficient Er energy sensitization is possible also in Si-rich Si3N4:Er systems.
Er emission sensitization in Si-rich SiO2:Er can be strongly enhanced through low temperature annealing [Luca ref]. For samples with 38 at % Si, as shown in graph 120 in
PbSe and PbS quantum dots produce radiative excitonic emission near 1550 nm, making them size-tunable extrinsic light emitters for designing light sources across a range of wavelengths. PbSe lifetimes have been predicted theoretically and observed experimentally in the 0.1-1 μs range with high quantum efficiency (>50%). The key to successful integration in a solid CMOS-compatible host will be passivation; current solid hosts reduce internal recombination efficiency by 10×. High quantum efficiency in PbS quantum dots synthesized from sequential ion implantation into SiO2 and annealed at 675° C. has been demonstrated.
Quantum dots with 3 nm radii have been observed with a room temperature lifetime of 1.7 μs, a value 103×larger than II-VI nanocrystals like CdSe. An absorption cross section of 1.5×10−14 cm2 has been measured at 488 nm. The models for PbSe and PbS media predict a >50 dB/cm modal gain within a 25 nm slot confinement structure, by injection currents of ˜20 mA/cm.
There are two methods for PbS electrical injection, that yield 1.53-1.56 μm emission: 1) optically pumped lasing from solution processed, passivated PbS quantum dots on Si; and 2) electroluminescence from the same.
The Si slot waveguide laser can employ a standard CMOS process flow using process tools and modules that can already be performed in any CMOS foundry for all fabrication steps. A gain medium fabrication pathway could employ ion implantation for delivery of Si-nc:Er, or PbSe/PbS, quantum dots into dielectric media. CMOS-compatible process flows would place PbSe/PbS monolithic integration at the endpoint of the CMOS process flow. Conductive Indium-Tin-Oxide (ITO) cladding can be introduced for transparent electrical contact to Si3N4:Er index confinement structures. ITO can be introduced by sputtering at the endpoint of a CMOS process flow.
The invention can be used in the formation an optical signal processor link, as well as optical amplifier and laser devices. The optical signal processor link can use the inventive waveguide structures described herein with modulators, waveguides and photodetectors that are on a silicon platform constituting an optical data link. The link can establish a capability for a high volume manufacturing transceiver platform and a platform for signal processing with the further integration of optical filters and switches.
A hidden advantage of the silicon optical source platform is the optical power supply. Light sources involve sophisticated electronic drivers, and both continuous and modulated signals are required for optical I/O and clock distribution, respectively. An optical power supply is a stand-alone chip that supplies these signals to a functional chip. The gain media have broadband emission and therefore multi-channel capability. Thus, allowing the invention to be used in such a platform.
Although the present invention has been shown and described with respect to several preferred embodiments thereof, various changes, omissions and additions to the form and detail thereof, may be made therein, without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
Claims
1. An optical amplifier on a silicon platform comprising:
- a first doped device layer;
- a second doped device layer; and
- a gain medium positioned between said first and second doped device layers, said gain medium comprising extrinsic gain materials so as to substantially confine in said gain medium a light signal and allow said optical amplifier to be electrically and optically pumped.
2. The optical amplifier of claim 1, wherein said first doped layer comprises p-type or n-type materials.
3. The optical amplifier of claim 1, wherein said second doped layer comprises n-type or p-type materials.
4. The optical amplifier of claim 1, wherein said extrinsic gain materials comprise Er ions.
5. The optical amplifier of claim 1, wherein said extrinsic gain materials comprise Er-doped silicon nitride.
6. The optical amplifier of claim 1, wherein said extrinsic gain materials comprise quantum dots.
7. The optical amplifier of claim 1, wherein said extrinsic gain materials comprise Er-doped silicon dioxide.
8. The optical amplifier of claim 7, wherein said Er-doped silicon dioxide comprises Si nanocrystals-sensitized Er.
9. The optical amplifier of claim 1, wherein said extrinsic gain materials comprise Si nanowires.
10. The optical amplifier of claim 9, wherein said Si nanowires are coupled to Er ions.
11. The optical amplifier of claim 6, wherein said quantum dots comprise PbS or PbSe quantum dots.
12. The optical amplifier of claim 6, wherein said quantum dots comprise Si quantum dots.
13. The optical amplifier of claim 1, wherein said optical amplifier defines a horizontal slot waveguide.
14. The optical amplifier of claim 1, wherein said optical amplifier defines a vertical slot waveguide.
15. The optical amplifier of claim 1, wherein said light signal is polarized with its magnetic field predominantly polarized parallel to the interfaces between said device layers and said gain medium.
16. The optical amplifier of claim 1, wherein said gain layer has dimensions less than or equal to 50 nm.
17. A method of performing optical amplification of a light signal on a silicon platform comprising:
- positioning a first doped device layer;
- positioning a second doped device layer; and
- exposing said light signal to a gain medium positioned between said first and second doped device layers, said gain medium comprising extrinsic gain materials so as to substantially confine in said gain medium said light signal and allow said optical amplifier to be electrically and optically pumped.
18. The method of claim 17, wherein said first doped layer comprises p-type or n-type materials.
19. The method of claim 17, wherein said second doped layer comprises p-type or n-type materials.
20. The method of claim 17, wherein said extrinsic gain materials comprise Er ions.
21. The method of claim 17, wherein said extrinsic gain materials comprise Er-doped silicon nitride.
22. The method of claim 17, wherein said extrinsic gain materials comprise quantum dots.
23. The method of claim 17, wherein said extrinsic gain materials comprise Er-doped silicon dioxide.
24. The method of claim 23, wherein said Er-doped silicon dioxide comprises Si nanocrystals-sensitized Er.
25. The method of claim 17, wherein said extrinsic gain materials comprise Si nanowires.
26. The method of claim 25, wherein said Si nanowires are coupled to Er ions.
27. The method of claim 22, wherein said quantum dots comprise PbS or PbSe quantum dots.
28. The method of claim 22, wherein said quantum dots comprise Si quantum dots.
29. The method of claim 17, wherein said light signal is polarized with its magnetic field predominantly polarized parallel to the interfaces between said device layers and said gain medium.
30. The method of claim 17, wherin said gain layer has dimensions less than or equal to 50 nm.
31. A method of forming an optical amplifier on a silicon platform comprising:
- forming a first doped device layer;
- forming a second doped device layer; and
- forming a gain medium positioned between said first and second doped device layers, said gain medium comprising extrinsic gain materials so as to substantially confine in said gain medium a light signal and allow said optical amplifier to be electrically and optically pumped.
32. The method of claim 31, wherein said first doped layer comprises p-type or n-type materials.
33. The method of claim 31, wherein said second doped layer comprises p-type or n-type materials.
34. The method of claim 31, wherein said extrinsic gain materials comprise Er ions.
35. The method of claim 31, wherein said extrinsic gain materials comprise Er-doped silicon nitride.
36. The method of claim 31, wherein said extrinsic gain materials comprise quantum dots.
37. The method of claim 31, wherein said extrinsic gain materials comprise Er-doped silicon dioxide.
38. The method of claim 37, wherein said Er-doped silicon dioxide comprises Si nanocrystals-sensitized Er.
39. The method of claim 31, wherein said extrinsic gain materials comprise Si nanowires.
40. The method of claim 39, wherein said Si nanowires are coupled to Er ions.
41. The method of claim 37, wherein said quantum dots comprise PbS or PbSe quantum dots.
42. The method of claim 37, wherein said quantum dots comprise Si quantum dots.
43. The method of claim 31, wherein said light signal is polarized with its magnetic field predominantly polarized parallel to the interfaces between said device layers and said gain medium.
44. The method of claim 31, wherein said gain layer has dimensions less than or equal to 50 nm.
Type: Application
Filed: May 18, 2007
Publication Date: Jan 15, 2009
Inventors: Lionel C. Kimerling (Concord, MA), Harry Atwater (South Pasadena, CA), Mark L. Brongersma (Redwood City, CA), Luca Dal Negro (Cambridge, MA), Thomas L. Koch (Califon, NJ), Philippe Fauchet (Pittsford, NY), Michal Lipson (Ithaca, NY), Jurgen Michel (Arlington, MA)
Application Number: 11/750,596
International Classification: H01S 3/14 (20060101);