Bart Kuyken, Xiaoping Liu, et al.
Optics Express
All-optical signal processing is an approach used to dramatically decrease power consumption and speed up the performance of next-generation optical telecommunications networks1-3. Nonlinear optical effects such as four-wave mixing and parametric gain have been explored to realize all-optical functions in glass fibres. An alternative approach is to use nanoscale engineering of silicon waveguides to enhance optical nonlinearities by up to five orders of magnitude, enabling integrated chip-scale all-optical signal processing. Four-wave mixing within silicon nanophotonic waveguides has been used to demonstrate telecom-band (λ ≈ 1,550 nm) all-optical functions including wavelength conversion6-9, signal regeneration and tunable optical delay11. Despite these important advances, strong two-photon absorption12 of the telecom-band pump presents a fundamental obstacle, limiting parametric gain to values of several decibels13. Here, we demonstrate a silicon nanophotonic optical parametric amplifier exhibiting broadband gain as high as 25.4 dB, using a mid-infrared pump near one-half the bandgap energy (E ≈ 0.55 eV, λ ≈2,200 nm), where parasitic two-photon absorption-related absorption vanishes12,14,15. This gain is high enough to compensate all insertion losses, resulting in 13-dB net off-chip amplification, using only an ultra-compact 4-mm silicon chip. Furthermore, engineering of higher-order waveguide dispersion16 can potentially enable mid-infrared-pumped silicon parametric oscillators 17-19 and amplifiers for telecom-band optical signals. © 2010 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
Bart Kuyken, Xiaoping Liu, et al.
Optics Express
William M. J. Green, Solomon Assefa, et al.
PHOTINICS 2010
Huapu Pan, Solomon Assefa, et al.
Optics Express
I.-Wei Hsieh, Xiaogang Chen, et al.
IEEE/LEOS Winter Topical Meeting 2008