Electrically pumped photonic integrated soliton microcomb
Arslan S. Raja, Andrey S. Voloshin, Hairun Guo, Sofya E. Agafonova,, Junqiu Liu, Alexander S. Gorodnitskiy, Maxim Karpov, Nikolay G. Pavlov, Erwan, Lucas, Ramzil R. Galiev, Artem E. Shitikov, John D. Jost, Michael L., Gorodetsky, Tobias J. Kippenberg

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates an electrically-driven, chip-integrated soliton microcomb using a laser diode coupled to a high-Q microresonator, enabling miniaturized, low-power optical frequency combs suitable for scalable applications.
Contribution
It introduces the first electrically-driven, chip-integrated soliton microcomb system with self-injection locking and tunable soliton states, advancing miniaturization and integration.
Findings
Achieved self-injection locking with 1000-fold linewidth narrowing.
Demonstrated transition from modulation instability to single soliton states.
System consumes less than 1 Watt of power and fits in 1cm³ volume.
Abstract
Optical frequency combs have revolutionized frequency metrology and timekeeping, and can be used in a wide range of optical technologies. Advances are under way that allow dramatic miniaturization of optical frequency combs using Kerr nonlinear optical microresonators, where broadband and coherent optical frequency combs can be generated from a continuous wave laser. Such `microcombs', provide a broad bandwidth with low power consumption, unprecedented form factor, wafer scale fabrication compatibility. For future high volume applications, integration and electrical pumping of soliton microcombs is essential. To date, however, microcombs still rely on optical pumping by bulk external laser modules that provide the required coherence, frequency agility and power levels for soliton formation. Electrically-driven, chip-integrated microcombs are inhibited by the high threshold power for…
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