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Photonics researchers report breakthrough in miniaturizing light-based chips

A schematic drawing shows an electro-optical modulator developed in the lab of Qiang Lin, professor of electrical and computer engineering. The smallest such component yet developed, it takes advantage of lithium niobate, a 鈥渨orkhorse鈥 material used by researchers to create advanced photonics integrated circuits. (人妻少妇专区 illustration / Michael Osadciw)

Rochester team demonstrates new way to control light as it moves through integrated circuits, paving a research avenue in communications, computing, and photonics research.

Photonic integrated circuits that use light instead of electricity for computing and signal processing promise greater speed, increased bandwidth, and greater energy efficiency than traditional circuits using electricity.

But they鈥檙e not yet small enough to compete in computing and other applications where electric circuits continue to reign.

illustration of photonics-based modulator
A schematic drawing shows an electro-optical modulator developed in the lab of Qiang Lin, professor of electrical and computer engineering. The smallest such component yet developed, it takes advantage of lithium niobate, a 鈥渨orkhorse鈥 material used by researchers to create advanced photonics integrated circuits. (人妻少妇专区 illustration / Michael Osadciw)

Electrical engineers at the believe they鈥檝e taken a major step in addressing the problem. Using a material widely adopted by photonics researchers, the Rochester team has created the smallest electro-optical modulator yet. The modulator is a key component of a photonics-based chip, controlling how light moves through its circuits.

In , the lab of , professor of electrical and computer engineering, describes using a thin film of lithium niobate (LN) bonded on a silicon dioxide layer to create not only the smallest LN modulator yet, but also one that operates at high speed and is energy efficient.

This 鈥減aves a crucial foundation for realizing large-scale LN photonic integrated circuits that are of immense importance for broad applications in data communication, microwave photonics, and quantum photonics,鈥 writes lead author Mingxiao Li, a graduate student in Lin鈥檚 lab.

Photo of Mingxiao Li
Graduate student and lead author Mingxiao Li holds a small lithium niobate chip in an etching chamber. (Photo courtesy of Qiang Lin’s lab)

A 鈥榳orkhorse鈥 material

Because of its outstanding electro-optic and nonlinear optic properties, lithium niobate has 鈥渂ecome a workhorse material system for photonics research and development,鈥 Lin says. 鈥淗owever current LN photonic devices, made upon either bulk crystal or thin-film platform require large dimensions and are difficult to scale down in size, which limits the modulation efficiency, energy consumption, and the degree of circuit integration. A major challenge lies in making high-quality nanoscopic photonic structures with high precision.鈥

The modulator project builds upon the lab鈥檚 previous use of lithium niobate to create a photonic nanocavity鈥攁nother key component in photonic chips. At only about a micron in size, the nanocavity can tune wavelengths using only two to three photons at room temperature鈥斺渢he first time we know of that even two or three photons have been manipulated in this way at room temperatures,鈥 Lin says. That device was described in a paper in .

The modulator could be used in conjunction with a nanocavity in creating a photonic chip at the nanoscale.

Other coauthors on the modulator project are postdoctoral associate Yang He 鈥20 (PhD) and graduate students Jingwei Ling 鈥18 (MS), Usman Javid, and Shixin Xue of Lin鈥檚 lab.

The project was supported with funding from the National Science Foundation, Defense Threat Reduction Agency, and Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA); fabrication of the device was done in part at the Cornell NanoScale Facility.