Universal electronic synthesis by microresonator-soliton photomixing
Jizhao Zang, Travis C. Briles, Jesse S. Morgan, Andreas Beling, Scott B. Papp

TL;DR
This paper introduces a chip-scale, universal millimeter-wave frequency synthesizer using integrated photonics and dual microresonator-soliton combs, enabling precise, tunable signals across a broad spectrum up to 1000 GHz.
Contribution
It presents a novel integrated photonic system that synthesizes wideband, tunable millimeter-wave signals with high accuracy and phase noise performance, extending CMOS electronics capabilities.
Findings
Achieved frequency synthesis from DC to >1000 GHz.
Demonstrated phase noise of -83 dBc/Hz at 150 GHz.
Generated continuously tunable tones across the mmW band.
Abstract
Access to electrical signals across the millimeter-wave (mmW) and terahertz (THz) bands offers breakthroughs for high-performance applications. Despite generations of revolutionary development, integrated electronics are challenging to operate beyond 100 GHz. Therefore, new technologies that generate wideband and tunable electronic signals would advance wireless communication, high-resolution imaging and scanning, spectroscopy, and network formation. Photonic approaches have been demonstrated for electronic signal generation, but at the cost of increased size and power consumption. Here, we describe a chip-scale, universal mmW frequency synthesizer, which uses integrated nonlinear photonics and high-speed photodetection to exploit the nearly limitless bandwidth of light. We use a photonic-integrated circuit to generate dual, microresonator-soliton frequency combs whose interferogram is…
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