Surface acoustic waves for acousto-optic modulation in buried silicon nitride waveguides
Peter J.M. van der Slot, Marco A.G. Porcel, Klaus-J. Boller

TL;DR
This paper theoretically demonstrates that Rayleigh surface acoustic waves can induce significant refractive index modulation in buried silicon nitride waveguides, enabling compact and efficient acousto-optic modulators with high modulation frequency.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach to use resonant surface acoustic waves for high-efficiency, high-frequency index modulation in amorphous dielectric waveguides, surpassing previous non-resonant methods.
Findings
Achieved a maximum relative index shift of 1.2×10⁻³ at ~87 MHz.
Demonstrated potential for sub-120 μm long Mach-Zehnder modulators.
Showed a 300-fold increase in index change over previous non-resonant techniques.
Abstract
We theoretically investigate the use of Rayleigh surface acoustic waves (SAWs) for refractive index modulation in optical waveguides consisting of amorphous dielectrics. Considering low-loss SiN waveguides with a standard core cross section of 4.40.03 m size, buried 8 m deep in a SiO cladding we compare surface acoustic wave generation in various different geometries via a piezo-active, lead zirconate titanate film placed on top of the surface and driven via an interdigitized transducer (IDT). Using numerical solutions of the acoustic and optical wave equations, we determine the strain distribution of the SAW under resonant excitation. From the overlap of the acoustic strain field with the optical mode field we calculate and maximize the attainable amplitude of index modulation in the waveguide. For the example of a near-infrared wavelength of 840 nm, a…
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