Optical information capacity of silicon
Dimitris Dimitropoulos, Bahram Jalali

TL;DR
This paper investigates the theoretical maximum amount of information that can be transmitted through silicon optical components, considering nonlinear losses and noise effects, and provides analytical expressions for capacity limits.
Contribution
It introduces the first analysis of silicon's optical information capacity accounting for nonlinear noise sources, offering formulas and insights for future optical communication systems.
Findings
Noise from nonlinear absorption limits capacity before nonlinear loss dominates.
Analytical expressions quantify the capacity limit and underlying interactions.
Solutions via coding and coherent signaling can extend the capacity.
Abstract
Modern computing and data storage systems increasingly rely on parallel architectures where processing and storage load is distributed within a cluster of nodes. The necessity for high-bandwidth data links has made optical communication a critical constituent of modern information systems and silicon the leading platform for creating the necessary optical components. While silicon is arguably the most extensively studied material in history, one of its most important attributes, an analysis of its capacity to carry optical information, has not been reported. The calculation of the information capacity of silicon is complicated by nonlinear losses, phenomena that emerge in optical nanowires as a result of the concentration of optical power in a small geometry. Nonlinear losses are absent in silica glass optical fiber and other common communication channels. While nonlinear loss in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhotonic and Optical Devices · Optical Network Technologies · Advanced Fiber Laser Technologies
