Low Dimensional Material based Electro-Optic Phase Modulation Performance Analysis
Rubab Amin, Rishi Maiti, Jacob B. Khurgin, Volker J. Sorger

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the performance of electro-optic phase modulators based on low-dimensional materials integrated into silicon photonics, highlighting design tradeoffs and potential for compact, high-performance devices for photonic computing.
Contribution
It provides an ab-initio analysis of low-dimensional material-based modulators, exploring design tradeoffs and performance limits for heterogeneously integrated photonic devices.
Findings
Plasmonic modes enable high-performance, compact modulators.
Low-dimensional materials like graphene and TMDs show promising index modulation.
Design insights reveal opportunities for micrometer-scale, energy-efficient modulators.
Abstract
Electro-optic modulators are utilized ubiquitously ranging from applications in data communication to photonic neural networks. While tremendous progress has been made over the years, efficient phase-shifting modulators are challenged with fundamental tradeoffs, such as voltage-length, index change-losses or energy-bandwidth, and no single solution available checks all boxes. While voltage-driven phase modulators, such as based on lithium niobate, offer low loss and high speed operation, their footprint of 10's of cm-scale is prohibitively large, especially for density-critical applications, for example in photonic neural networks. Ignoring modulators for quantum applications, where loss is critical, here we distinguish between current versus voltage-driven modulators. We focus on the former, since current-based schemes of emerging thin electro-optical materials have shown unity-strong…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhotonic and Optical Devices · Advanced Photonic Communication Systems · Optical Network Technologies
