Frequency-stable nanophotonic microcavities via integrated thermometry
Sai Kanth Dacha, Yun Zhao, Karl J. McNulty, Gaurang R. Bhatt, Michal Lipson, and Alexander L. Gaeta

TL;DR
This paper presents an integrated thermometry technique for stabilizing high-Q microresonators on silicon chips, significantly reducing frequency drift and enabling stable, long-term operation of photonic devices like lasers and Kerr combs.
Contribution
The authors introduce a novel integrated resistance thermometer for microresonator temperature stabilization, achieving sub-picometer wavelength accuracy and enhanced frequency stability over days.
Findings
Achieved <0.8 pm wavelength error over days
Reduced laser frequency drift by 48x
Stabilized Kerr comb without photodetection
Abstract
Field-deployable integrated photonic devices co-packaged with electronics will enable important applications such as optical interconnects, quantum information processing, precision measurements, spectroscopy, and microwave generation. Significant progress has been made over the past two decades on increasing the functional complexity of photonic chips. However, a critical challenge that remains is the lack of scalable techniques to overcome thermal perturbations arising from the environment and co-packaged electronics. Here, we demonstrate a fully integrated scheme to monitor and stabilize the temperature of a high-Q microresonator on a Si-based chip, which can serve as a photonic frequency reference. Our approach relies on a thin-film metallic resistor placed directly above the microcavity, acting as an integrated resistance thermometer, enabling unique mapping of the cavity's…
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