Scalable integration of silicon nanophotonic devices on silicon carbide substrates
ORAL
Abstract
Silicon carbide has emerged as a promising material for on-chip quantum and nonlinear nanophotonic devices. In addition to its excellent optical, electrical, and material properties, silicon carbide hosts optically active color centers and has a large intrinsic second-order nonlinear susceptibility. Here, we present a scalable, on-chip approach toward CMOS-compatible silicon-on-silicon carbide hybrid platforms via direct wafer bonding. Our optimized bonding method yields large-area, defect-free, uniform films with minimal oxide at the silicon-silicon carbide interface. By etching crystalline silicon nanophotonic waveguides and ring resonators into the silicon layer of the heterogenous film with well-established silicon fabrication methods that do not deteriorate the silicon carbide, we are able to fabricate high-quality, near-infrared resonators. This wafer scalable hybrid photonics platform could be an important step towards silicon carbide quantum technologies.
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Presenters
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Clayton T DeVault
University of Chicago
Authors
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Clayton T DeVault
University of Chicago
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Abram L Falk
IBM TJ Watson Research Center
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F. Joseph F Heremans
Argonne National Laboratory
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Alan M Dibos
Argonne National Lab, Argonne National Laboratory
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David D Awschalom
University of Chicago
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Alexander A High
University of Chicago