TY - JOUR
T1 - Ultralow Loss Design Methodology for Energy-Efficient Thermo-Optic Phase Shifters
AU - Qiu, Huaqing
AU - Prost, Mathias
AU - Coenen, David
AU - Kongnyuy, Tangla David
AU - Reza, Manuel
AU - Croes, Guillaume
AU - Ramezani, Maliheh
AU - Subramaniam, Puvendren
AU - Oprins, Herman
AU - Hu, Hao
AU - Brouckaert, Joost
AU - Jansen, Roelof
AU - Dahlem, Marcus
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Thermo-optic phase shifters are crucial components extensively utilized in large-scale photonic integrated circuits due to their simple design and well-established fabrication processes. The requirement for negligible insertion loss in low-power-consumption thermo-optic phase shifters is becoming increasingly critical, particularly in cascaded configurations employed in applications such as LiDAR, photonic computing, programmable photonics, and quantum photonics. To address this need, we present a comprehensive theory based on the fundamental coupled-mode theory for sharp-bent waveguides. We employ phase mismatch in a compact spiral waveguide to eliminate coupling loss and enhance the efficiency of thermo-optic phase shifters. Our approach successfully overcomes inherent trade-offs, demonstrating ultralow insertion loss in compact and power-efficient silicon-based phase shifters operating in the C-band. The proposed simplest-design device exhibits a record lowest measured insertion loss of 0.14 dB among all residual-heat-absorption-type phase shifters. Simultaneously, the power consumption and modulation bandwidth are measured to be 3.4 mW/π and 12.5 kHz, respectively. This methodology holds substantial promise for minimizing the insertion loss across various residual-heat-absorption-type thermo-optic phase shifters, which employ different materials and operate in diverse bands, such as the telecom and visible spectra. The experimental realization of the C-band silicon phase shifter on IMEC’s Si/SiN platform expresses its potential as a fundamental component for scalable mass production in extensive photonic circuit architectures.
AB - Thermo-optic phase shifters are crucial components extensively utilized in large-scale photonic integrated circuits due to their simple design and well-established fabrication processes. The requirement for negligible insertion loss in low-power-consumption thermo-optic phase shifters is becoming increasingly critical, particularly in cascaded configurations employed in applications such as LiDAR, photonic computing, programmable photonics, and quantum photonics. To address this need, we present a comprehensive theory based on the fundamental coupled-mode theory for sharp-bent waveguides. We employ phase mismatch in a compact spiral waveguide to eliminate coupling loss and enhance the efficiency of thermo-optic phase shifters. Our approach successfully overcomes inherent trade-offs, demonstrating ultralow insertion loss in compact and power-efficient silicon-based phase shifters operating in the C-band. The proposed simplest-design device exhibits a record lowest measured insertion loss of 0.14 dB among all residual-heat-absorption-type phase shifters. Simultaneously, the power consumption and modulation bandwidth are measured to be 3.4 mW/π and 12.5 kHz, respectively. This methodology holds substantial promise for minimizing the insertion loss across various residual-heat-absorption-type thermo-optic phase shifters, which employ different materials and operate in diverse bands, such as the telecom and visible spectra. The experimental realization of the C-band silicon phase shifter on IMEC’s Si/SiN platform expresses its potential as a fundamental component for scalable mass production in extensive photonic circuit architectures.
KW - Integrated photonics
KW - Optical phase shifter
KW - Phase matching condition
KW - Silicon photonics
KW - Thermo-optic effect
U2 - 10.1021/acsphotonics.4c02518
DO - 10.1021/acsphotonics.4c02518
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:85219528525
SN - 2330-4022
VL - 12
SP - 1650
EP - 1657
JO - ACS Photonics
JF - ACS Photonics
IS - 3
ER -