Sputtered AlN buffer layer for low-loss crystalline AlN-on-sapphire integrated photonics
Samuele Brunetta, Samantha Sbarra, Brandon Shuen Yi Loke, Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Carlin, Nicolas Grandjean, Camille-Sophie Br\`es, Rapha\"el Butt\'e

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that sputtered AlN buffer layers can eliminate voids in crystalline AlN-on-sapphire, significantly reducing propagation losses and enhancing the performance of integrated photonic devices, especially in visible wavelengths.
Contribution
Introducing a sputtered AlN buffer layer to produce void-free crystalline AlN-on-sapphire layers with high quality factors and low propagation losses for integrated photonics.
Findings
Void-free AlN layers achieve Q factors up to 2.0×10^6.
Propagation losses are reduced to below 0.2 dB/cm at 1550 nm.
Enhanced performance in high-power and visible photonics applications.
Abstract
In recent years, aluminum nitride (AlN) has emerged as an attractive material for integrated photonics due to its low propagation losses, wide transparency window, and presence of both second- and third-order optical nonlinearities. However, most of the research led on this platform has primarily focused on applications, rather than material optimization, although the latter is equally important to ensure its technological maturity. In this work, we show that voids, which are commonly found in crystalline AlN-on-sapphire epilayers, have a detrimental role in related photonic structures, as they can lead to propagation losses exceeding 30 dB cm at 1550 nm. Their impact on light propagation is further quantified through finite-difference time-domain simulations that reveal that void-related scattering losses are strongly dependent on their size and density in the layer. As a…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
