08 Oct 2014
Development could enhance status of silicon as go-to material for both electronics and photonics.
A team of researchers, led by the Optoelectronics Research Centre, (ORC), Southampton, UK, has demonstrated what it is calling a breakthrough technique that offers the first possibility of silicon-based detectors for telecommunications.For decades, silicon has been the foundation of the microelectronics revolution and, owing to its excellent optical properties in the near- and mid-infrared range, is now promising to have a similar impact on photonics.
The ORC-led team’s research, reported in Nature Materials, describes engineering the electronic band structure of laser-crystallised silicon photonic devices to help overcome one of the key challenges of using silicon in data communications.
The laser processing technique has been developed for their silicon optical fiber platform. This demonstrates that it is now possible to completely crystallize the core material, while at the same time writing in large stresses to modify the optoelectronic properties, achieving extreme bandgap reductions from 1.11eV down to 0.59eV, enabling optical detection out to 2,100nm.
Coupling problem 'solved'
Incorporating silicon materials within the fiber geometry avoids the problems usually associated with coupling between the micron-sized fibers used for the transport of light, and the nanoscale waveguides on-chip that are employed for data processing and communications systems.
Dr. Anna Peacock, an Associate Professor in Optoelectronics, who heads the group at the ORC, commented, “The ability to grow single crystal–like materials directly inside the fiber core is a truly exciting prospect because, for the first time, the optoelectronic properties of the silicon fiber devices will be able to approach those of their on-chip counterparts.”
Dr Noel Healy, the lead researcher on the project, added, “Our discovery uses large variable strains to provide unprecedented control over silicon's optoelectronic properties. This greatly increases the number of potential applications for the material in both electrical and optical applications.
“Our paper shows that we can halve the material’s bandgap energy. That means silicon can now be considered as a medium for optical detection all the way through the telecommunications band.” Fellow researcher Dr Sakellaris Mailis points out that this versatile laser processing method can be easily extended to a wide range of material systems.
About the Author
Matthew Peach is a contributing editor tooptics.org.
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