Second-order nonlinear optics in silicon
ORAL
Abstract
The ubiquity and scalability of CMOS technologies are hard to ignore. To that end, nonlinear optics is a promising enhancement to this technology, enabling compact sources in the 1.2 to 4 μm wavelength range that are sufficiently affordable, compact, and low power. Efficient transduction of photons via nonlinear optics necessitates second-order material optical nonlinearities, which are identically zero in silicon. Second-order nonlinearities can, however, be induced in silicon via the application of a DC electric field, which has thus far been demonstrated at room temperature. We demonstrate additional proof-of-concept for this technology and provide future roadmaps for its scalability and applicability to quantum information processing.
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Presenters
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David Heydari
Stanford University
Authors
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David Heydari
Stanford University
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Mircea Catuneanu
TU-Dresden
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Edwin Ng
Stanford Univ, NTT Research, Inc., NTT Research Inc., PHI Laboratories
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Dodd J Gray
MIT
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Ryan Hamerly
NTT Research Inc., PHI Laboratories
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Hideo Mabuchi
Stanford University
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Kambiz Jamshidi
TU-Dresden